Author: Andy Ogbarmey-Tettey

  • Ukraine war: Melitopol residents resist Russian occupation

    Russian forces met fierce resistance from residents when they arrived in the southern Ukrainian city of Melitopol in February.

    Locals tried to block armoured vehicles as the convoy of soldiers rolled in to occupy the city, and people flooded the streets waving Ukrainian flags.

    When the Russians started cracking down on the protesters, the resistance movement was forced to evolve and new groups emerged.

    Melitopol, according to the US-based Institute for the Study of War, is an area where partisan warfare has been active since at least the middle of March.

    Ukraine’s Military Intelligence Directorate has reported that from 20 March to 12 April “partisans eliminated 70 Russian soldiers during their night patrol”.

    These groups are continuing to carry out attacks.

    Last Wednesday a Russian armoured train was reportedly derailed. Days earlier, two Russian soldiers were found dead in the street. Last month a bridge near Melitopol – used to deliver supplies to the Russian army – was blown up.

    A destroyed bridge near Melitopol, which Russian forces used to transport suppliesIMAGE SOURCE, UKRAINIAN SPECIAL OPERATION FORCE
    Image caption, The destroyed bridge near Melitopol that Russian forces used to transport supplies

    Ivan Fedorov, the mayor of Melitopol, says these attacks were organised by partisan groups. “It’s the job of our partisans, our secret services and our soldiers. They do this job together,” he tells the BBC.

    Mr Fedorov himself was abducted by Russian forces and later released as part of a prisoner exchange.

    The Russians are desperately trying to crush all resistance. They are searching houses and detaining people, residents say, often at random.

    On 29 April, armed men in military uniform with white armbands – the marking used by Russian soldiers – abducted Boris Kleshev, the head of a local fire brigade in Melitopol.

    For two weeks his relatives heard nothing about his whereabouts. A few days ago, a pro-Russian Telegram channel posted a video showing Mr Kleshev and other Ukrainian men admitting that they were sharing information on Russian movements with the Ukrainian military.

    Mr Kleshev was speaking with a low voice, clearly under duress. But even if it looked like a forced confession, those who made the video were unlikely to have cared – their aim is to break the resistance spreading through Melitopol.

    These resistance groups, however, are only a small part of the movement.

    “Ninety per cent of Melitopol residents are now partisans and they resist in their own way,” says Svitlana Zalizetska, a local journalist.

    “Some people just stare at the Russian soldiers with hatred. Others sing patriotic songs at night. Some people hang posters in the street with Ukrainian flags,” she says, adding that some also pass on information about Russian military movements.

    People protest the abduction of Melitopol mayor Ivan Federov outside the regional administration building, after he was reportedly taken away by Russian forces, during their ongoing invasionIMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS
    Image caption, Crowds gathered outside the regional administration building in Melitopol when the city’s mayor was reportedly abducted

    At the start of the invasion in February, Melitopol residents organised mass protests against the Russian army’s presence. People regularly took to the streets with Ukrainian flags, chanting: “Melitopol is Ukraine.”

    “Russian forces were truly shocked to see that the local population was not happy to see them. Those soldiers really believed that they were liberators,” says Iryna (not her real name), who lives in Melitopol.

    A few weeks after the invasion, police from Rosgvardia – Russia’s national guard – arrived to crack down on the protests. They started dispersing crowds and detaining activists.

    But Russian troops appear to understand that defeating the resistance here requires more than just stopping the rallies.

    Unlike other regions occupied by Russian forces, the military in Melitopol have been trying to win people’s hearts and minds. “We have the brand of ‘polite people’”, Iryna jokes, referring to the term used to describe Russian soldiers when Moscow annexed Crimea in 2014.

    “These are ordinary guys who look like us and try to be nice,” she explains. “They help elderly women and show that they care about people. But they can’t realise that it was them who created all these troubles and that our people didn’t beg for help before.”

    In order to create a perception of normality, the Russian forces try to silence anyone who openly opposes them.

    The mayor of the Ukrainian city of Melitopol, Ivan FedorovIMAGE SOURCE, EPA

    Image caption, Mayor of Melitopol Ivan Fedorov was detained by Russian forces in March

    Svitlana Zalizetska, who used to run a popular news website, was pressured to co-operate with the new authorities appointed by the Russian military. She refused. When the mayor, Mr Fedorov, was abducted, Svitlana realised she could be next. She later escaped into territory controlled by Ukrainian forces.

    Then, Russian officers started threatening her family. “First they wanted to destroy the website. They failed,” she says. “Then they tried to capture me. They failed again. Then they detained my father and took him hostage to make me come back, and gain control over the website.”

    Only when she publicly acknowledged that she no longer owned the website and stopped writing for it, they released her father.

    The Russian army is mobilising resources to change the pro-Ukrainian views of the population in Melitopol. They desperately want to get schools, shops and businesses to reopen with the aim of presenting Russian rule as a positive step.

    And the longer the occupation lasts, the harder it is for people to resist. Some residents, with no funds left to feed their families, are returning to work – even if it implies supporting the new Russian regime.

    “If they are physically killing Ukrainians in Mariupol, here they’re trying to break our souls,” says Iryna. “But they will fail.”

    Source: BBC

  • England squad: Jarrod Bowen & James Justin called up for Nations League games

    England manager Gareth Southgate has called up uncapped West Ham forward Jarrod Bowen for the Nations League games with Hungary, Germany and Italy.

    Bowen has scored 18 goals and provided 13 assists for the Hammers this season.

    The 25-year-old was in contention for the previous England squad in March but was ruled out by a fractured foot bone.

    Leicester City right-back James Justin is named for the first time and Fikayo Tomori is recalled for June’s matches after helping AC Milan win Serie A.

    Leeds United midfielder Kalvin Phillips and Newcastle United defender Kieran Trippier also return after injury.

    Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson is not named among the midfielders after a heavy workload in a season that will only end on Saturday in the Champions League final, with Southgate saying “I don’t need to know any more about him”.

    The England boss suggested that was also his reason for leaving out Tottenham Hotspur defender Eric Dier, saying the 28-year-old was “definitely in our thinking”.

    There is also no place for Henderson’s Liverpool team-mate Joe Gomez, so Trent Alexander-Arnold is the only representative of a Reds squad looking to complete a treble of cups this season when they face Real Madrid in Paris.

    As Southgate indicated would be the case, Manchester City’s Kyle Walker returns to the squad despite not having played in the Premier League since mid-April because of an ankle problem.

    Southgate said he has selected 11 defenders in his squad because of doubts over the fitness of some.

    “It is a bit of a minefield, in terms of players who have missed football and are coming back from injuries,” he said. “Luke Shaw and Ben Chilwell haven’t played at all. Marc Guehi is a doubt.

    “Fikayo has had a very good season with AC Milan and I talked in March about wanting to have a look at some of the young centre-backs coming through and some of these guys are slightly ahead of Tyrone [Mings], who has always played well for us.

    “At the same time we have to make opportunities for good young players to have a look at them.”

    England’s Nations League fixtures
    Date Opponent Venue
    Saturday, 4 June Hungary Puskas Arena, Budapest
    Tuesday, 7 June Germany Allianz Arena, Munich
    Saturday, 11 June Italy Molineux, Wolverhampton
    Tuesday, 14 June Hungary Molineux, Wolverhampton

    Another Italy-based player, Tammy Abraham, is included after a stellar season under Jose Mourinho at Roma, for whom he has scored 27 goals.

    The former Chelsea striker is preferred to Everton’s Dominic Calvert-Lewin in a group of forwards that also includes Manchester City title-winning trio Phil Foden, Jack Grealish and Raheem Sterling.

    Southgate has resisted a plea from Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta not to include 20-year-old forward Bukayo Saka, who has played a part in every league game for the Gunners in 2021-22.

    “I think Mikel Arteta knows we look after players well,” said the England boss. “We’ve given all the players a week off this week, which not everyone has done, but we feel that has worked well for us.

    “We’ve had a good discussion around Bukayo Saka and all the players from Arsenal. All the players are carrying niggles after a long season, but they all want to be here.”

    Jadon Sancho, who did not feature for Manchester United in the last month of the season because of tonsillitis, also misses out, as does his club-mate Marcus Rashford, who has struggled for form throughout this campaign.

    Another notable absentee is Leicester’s James Maddison, who won the Foxes player of the season award after 17 goals and 11 assists in all competitions. The 25-year-old’s last cap was almost three years ago.

    “He has finished the season very well,” added Southgate. “He is obviously scoring goals but we just feel we are very happy with the players that have been with us.

    “He is competing with Mason Mount and Phil Foden and these types of players in the role where he is at his best. It’s one of the positions where there is a lot of strength in depth and you may have to leave players out who may be equally as deserving.”

    Other players omitted from the previous squad include defenders Tyrick Mitchell and Kyle Walker-Peters as well as forwards Emile Smith Rowe and Ollie Watkins.

    West Ham forward Bowen began his career with Hereford before moving to Hull, where he excelled in the Championship before making the move to West Ham in January 2020.

    Southgate says he “thoroughly deserves” his first senior call-up following “constantly strong performances”.

    “We were certainly thinking about involving him in March before he got injured,” said the England boss.

    “He’s a goal threat and his direct journey is an interesting reminder that you don’t have to be at an elite academy – experience is a great route to go.

    “He works incredibly hard for the team, which we want all our players to do.”

    He was equally complimentary about Leicester defender Justin, who has made 19 appearances in all competitions since recovering from an anterior cruciate injury sustained in February 2021.

    “He is a player we’ve followed for a long time and he obviously had a very serious injury,” added Southgate. “We feel he’s now played the number of matches needed.

    “He’s comfortable at right or left back – he’s very comfortable with the ball and a super athlete. He’s a very good person from the feedback I’ve had and we’re really looking forward to working closely with him.”

    England squad in full

    Goalkeepers: Jordan Pickford (Everton), Nick Pope (Burnley), Aaron Ramsdale (Arsenal)

    Defenders: Trent Alexander-Arnold (Liverpool), Conor Coady (Wolves), Marc Guehi (Crystal Palace), Reece James (Chelsea), James Justin (Leicester), Harry Maguire (Man Utd), John Stones (Man City), Fikayo Tomori (AC Milan), Kieran Trippier (Newcastle), Kyle Walker (Man City), Ben White (Arsenal)

    Midfielders: Jude Bellingham (Borussia Dortmund), Conor Gallagher (Crystal Palace, on loan from Chelsea), Mason Mount (Chelsea), Kalvin Phillips (Leeds), Declan Rice (West Ham), James Ward-Prowse (Southampton)

    Forwards: Tammy Abraham (Roma), Jarrod Bowen (West Ham), Phil Foden (Man City), Jack Grealish (Man City), Harry Kane (Tottenham), Bukayo Saka (Arsenal), Raheem Sterling (Man City)

    Source: BBC

  • Jesse Lingard: West Ham enquire about Manchester United player

    West Ham United have enquired about Manchester United’s Jesse Lingard, who becomes a free agent next month.

    Hammers boss David Moyes has a long-standing interest in the England attacking midfielder, 29, after a successful loan spell last season.

    Moyes has twice tried to sign Lingard on a permanent basis since then.

    Lingard says he feels let down over his treatment during the past 12 months and has resolved to leave Old Trafford despite new boss Erik ten Hag arriving.

    There was significant interest from clubs in Lingard during the past two transfer windows.

    However, Manchester United refused to let Lingard join a rival for a European place and both former manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and his temporary replacement Ralf Rangnick told him he would get an opportunity to press his first-team claims.

    Lingard started only two Premier League games last season and was upset interim manager Rangnick did not introduce him from the bench in the 3-0 win against Brentford, which would have been a farewell appearance at Old Trafford for a player who joined the club when he was seven.

    He did not make an appearance in the club’s final four games of the season.

    Lingard’s brother posted a message on social media complaining that after “20 years of blood, sweat and tears, four domestic trophies and three cup final goals” there was “not even a farewell” for the England player.

    While there are other clubs interested, Moyes hopes his association with West Ham – Lingard recently posted in appreciation of former team-mate Mark Noble, who is retiring – will give them an advantage.

    Lingard scored nine goals and registered five assists in 16 appearances for the Hammers while on loan and was named Premier League Player of the Month for April 2021.

    Moyes has vowed to strengthen his squad after a disappointing end to the season, which included a Europa League semi-final defeat against Eintracht Frankfurt and a run of five points from their last seven Premier League games, which cost them a second successive top-six finish.

    West Ham will instead go into the Europa Conference League play-offs in August, but coach Stuart Pearce will not be part of Moyes’ backroom staff for those after he announced on Monday he was leaving the club.

    Source: BBC

  • #AccraFloods: Vehicles carried away, several roads destroyed after downpour

    In Ghana, there is concern whenever dark clouds gather because no matter the quantum of rain, several lives are affected as their surroundings get flooded.

    A 10-hour rainfall that commenced at the wee hours of Tuesday, May 24, has left several parts of the country flooded with some public infrastructure destroyed.

    Over the weekend, several houses and shops were filled with water after an 8-hour downpour. Motorists found it difficult to move as parts of the road was flooded. Floodwaters wash away vehicles into a drain at Nima.

    Beyeeman Junction, Graphic Road, Osu, were among the flooded areas in Accra.

    Today has been no exception but for several roads that have been destroyed. Quite a number of roads in Accra have been damaged after the rains came down.

    Ghanaians have flooded Twitter with images and videos of the bad roads. These roads are in locations such as Adabraka, Kaneshie, Pamprom in Abossey Okai, among others.

    Also, parts of the Accra-Tema Beach Road have caved in.

    Also, persons heading to Gomoa, CapeCoast, Mankessim, Takoradi and Nzema have been entreated to desist from embarking the journey due to the bad nature of the road.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • An account of how the Owoo Family became part owners of Achimota Forest land

    The Owoo Family has recently made headlines in Ghana after it emerged they were original owners of the Achimota Forest land and have now been given portions of the land back, with the quantity of the land given to them becoming a matter of contention.

    After the state (the then Gold Coast) acquired the land from the Owoo Family between 1921 and 1927 and gave the family compensation of some £4000, the family in 2006 began requesting for portions of the land back.

    The family said it wanted portions of the land back because the land was not being used for its intended purpose – a forest reserve.

    The New Patriotic Party under president John Agyekum Kufuor after several deliberations come to a conclusion that the Owoo Family deserves portions of the Achimota land that was not used as the forest reserve. It decided to give the family 90 acres.

    Then came the National Democratic Party government under former President John Dramani Mahama which become the second administration to give portions of the land back to the family.

    After negotiations with the family, the government decided to increase the portions of the land given to the family by the Kufuor government to some 196.5 acres.

    The New Patriotic Party government led by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, after some negotiations with the family, also decided to give the Owoo Family portions of the de-gazetted Achimota Forest land (part of the land that is not part of the reserve) to the family.

    In addition to the 196.5 acres, the Akufo-Addo government decided to give the family additional 165 acres of the land, bringing the total acres of land given back to the family to 361.50 acres.

    The Lands Ministry in a statement has brought out details of how the Owoo family acquired portions of the Achimota Forest Land.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Kurt Zouma: West Ham defender pleads guilty to kicking and slapping cat

    West Ham United defender Kurt Zouma has pleaded guilty to kicking and slapping his pet cat in a video that also showed him saying “I swear I’ll kill it”.

    The 27-year-old admitted two offences under the Animal Welfare Act at a hearing at Thames Magistrates’ Court.

    Zouma’s brother Yoan, who plays for Dagenham and Redbridge, admitted one offence after an RSPCA investigation.

    Yoan, 24, filmed the incident, which was posted on social media. Sentencing has been adjourned to 1 June.

    The brothers’ addresses were withheld following a court order.

    The court was told about disturbing footage of the incident, which was filmed at the West Ham player’s home and posted on Snapchat with ‘laughing’ emojis by his brother on 6 February.

    It was later seen by a woman who had been messaging Yoan, and she raised concern.

    Zouma could be seen volleying the Bengal cat across his kitchen, before throwing a pair of shoes at it and slapping its head.

    Kurt Zouma arrives at court
    Kurt Zouma wore a hood as he was bundled into the court building by security guards who also covered him with umbrellas

    Prosecutor Hazel Stevens told the court Kurt could be heard saying: “I swear I’ll kill it, I swear I’ll kill it.”

    He admitted two counts of causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal.

    Yoan admitted one count of aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring his older brother to commit an offence.

    The woman who saw the clip was so shocked that she called off their date, telling him: “I don’t think hitting a cat like that is OK – don’t bother coming today.”

    Stevens said the offences appeared to be carried out after the cats were deemed responsible for damaging a chair in the home.

    “Kurt Zouma is determined to chastise or carry out some sort of retribution for the damage caused,” she said.

    “Since this footage was put in the public domain there has been a spate of people hitting cats and posting it on various social media sites.”

    Yoan Zouma
    Yoan Zouma is a centre-back for Dagenham and Redbridge

    The court heard the Premier League defender, who apologised for his actions, has since agreed for his two Bengal male cats to be rehomed.

    An independent vet, who assessed the cats later and watched the video, said there were “no remaining signs of injuries” to the animals when he examined them but that being hit and kicked would have caused suffering while being chased would have caused fear or distress.

    Defending the West Ham player, Trevor Burke QC said his client had been fined £250,000 by his club and lost a “substantial” sponsorship deal with sportswear firm adidas.

    Zouma had also not been picked for the France national team.

    Burke said his client had been of previously impeccable character, and nine animal charities had benefited from his fine.

    He said the defender had suffered abuse, including threats and racial slurs, which has “totally disrupted his life”.

    Kurt arrived at court in chaotic fashion as several security guards emerged from a vehicle holding umbrellas to form a protective shield from camera crews and photographers around the defendant as he entered the court building.

    One other charge against each brother was withdrawn after their guilty pleas.

    RSPCA chief inspectorate officer Dermot Murphy said: “It’s never acceptable to treat an animal in this way and we were shocked when the video was first brought to our attention.

    “What makes this case even more sad is the way the video was filmed and shared, making light of such cruelty.

    “We hope this case will serve as a reminder that all animals deserve to be treated with kindness, compassion and respect, and that we will not tolerate cruelty by anybody.”

    Source: BBC

  • 2021/22 GHPL: Hearts of Oak staff and players to undergo tests today following outbreak of swine flu

    Hearts of Oak staff and players will undergo another round of tests this morning following the outbreak of severe flu in camp which prompted the intervention of the Ghana Health Service (GHS).

    This led to the postponement of their match week 30 encounter against Eleven Wonder over the weekend.

    The GHS released a statement to confirm their preliminary investigations revealed the outbreak of an H3N2 virus, a type of Swine Flu and subsequently recommended a 7-day isolation for the affected players and staff.

    “The next test is on Friday morning at 10am, and after that, depending on the results, the Ghana Health Service will advise us on the next line of action,” Communications Director of the club, Opare Add told Citi Sports.

    Before the matchday 29 game against Bibiani Gold Stars, some players of the Phobians were admitted at the hospital and were discharged ahead of the game at the Accra Sports Stadium.

    Hearts of Oak are 4th on the league table with 47 points after 29 matches played so far.

    Source: Football Ghana

     

  • Kylian Mbappe: France forward says Real Madrid dream not over despite new PSG deal

    Kylian Mbappe says the dream of one day playing for Real Madrid is “never over” despite opting to sign a new contract and stay at Paris St-Germain.

    The France striker, 23, rejected a move to the Spanish champions at the weekend to sign a new three-year contract PSG.

    However, speaking to BBC Sport’s Guillem Balague on Monday, Mbappe has not ruled out a move to Real later in his career.

    “You never know what can happen in the future,” he said.

    “I give up to think about the future, I only think about the present and the present is I signed a new contract for three years more at Paris St-Germain.”

    Asked if signing the contract meant the Real Madrid dream was over, Mbappe said: “Never over.”

    ‘To be a great player you have to be honest’

    Kylian Mbappe
    Kylian Mbappe’s new deal keeps him at PSG until 2025

    Spain’s La Liga reacted angrily to the news, calling the deal “scandalous”.

    Mbappe, regarded as one of the best players in the world, says he spoke to Real Madrid president Florentino Perez directly to inform him of his decision before signing the contract extension at PSG.

    “It was last week I made the decision to stay,” he added.

    “First of all I spoke to the president of Real Madrid because I have a lot of respect for him and the club. I think it was important to say it personally that I wasn’t going to go.

    “To be a great player [you have] to be honest and everything was great and good because we have a good relationship.”

    ‘I’ve always stayed focused on the pitch’

    Speculation about Mbappe’s future gathered pace towards the end of the season although the forward says he never let it distract him from his duty on the pitch.

    Mbappe scored 28 goals in Ligue 1 to help PSG win the title.

    “I am 100% focused on my game,” he said.

    “I didn’t have to follow [the speculation]. During the season I was focused 100% because I had individual goals and collective goals.

    “It was important to stay focused on the pitch and make my decision when the season was over.”

    ‘I want to give pleasure to people’

    Kylian Mbappe
    Kylian Mbappe helped France win the World Cup in 2018

    Mbappe, a World Cup winner with France, says he is now looking forward to playing in many more important games for his club and country.

    “I have played in amazing games and important games,” he said. “I played in a World Cup and won a World Cup so I am happy and I want to continue this way.

    “I always want to give pleasure to people because I was young and in the stadium and I enjoyed the time when I came to watch some players and now it is my turn to give pleasure to people and to be respectful on and off the pitch.

    “I try to be an example because I know a lot of young guys watch me all the time and I want to give them the best way to enjoy life, even if it is not as a football player. You have to enjoy and stay focused on the real things of life.”

    Staying in France key for Mbappe

    Speaking earlier on Monday in a news conference, Mbappe said his decision to remain at PSG was partly based on sentimental reasons and believes there are “more wonderful chapters to write” at the club.

    “Leaving my country isn’t the right thing,” he said.

    “There is a sentimental aspect to this. It is my country.

    “The ongoing project has changed as well. That has made me want to stay here because I don’t think my story is over yet.

    “That goes for me collectively and individually. I think there are many more wonderful chapters to write.”

    ‘We want to win the Champions League’

    Kylian Mbappe celebrates with Neymar and Lionel Messi
    Kylian Mbappe formed a formidable front three with Neymar and Lionel Messi last season

    Mbappe started his career at Monaco before moving to PSG in 2017, initially on loan before joining permanently.

    Since being at the club he has won four Ligue 1 titles and three French Cups.

    Champions League success has so far eluded PSG but the club’s president Nasser Al-Khelaifi believes that, with Mbappe now staying, European glory can be achieved.

    “We want to create more trophies. We have won plenty so far, we want to win many more,” he said.

    “We want to win the Champions League. We are headed down the same path with our sporting goals.”

    There had been reports PSG offered Mbappe more control over sporting decisions in an effort to convince him to stay.

    But the forward said his sole focus and responsibility for the club is what he can do on the pitch.

    “I remain a footballer, who is part of a team, and I will not go beyond this role,” added Mbappe.

    “Everyone knows that last year I wanted to leave and I was convinced that it was the best choice, but the years go by and things change.”

    ‘Ligue 1 needs respect as well’

    In its response to Mbappe’s decision to stay at PSG, La Liga announced plans to file a complaint to Uefa as well as French and EU authorities.

    As well as calling the deal “scandalous”, La Liga president Javier Tebas said it “threatens the economic sustainability of European football”.

    But Al-Khelaifi responded: “Maybe it is a good thing if Ligue 1 is doing better than La Liga.

    “La Liga isn’t what it was three or four years ago. I have respect for all the clubs, but we need respect as well.

    “We have the best player in the world, that’s what matters to us. As for what other people are saying, that is not an issue. I am not listening to that.”

    Source: BBC

  • Dozens missing in Nigeria after militant attacks

    More than 30 people are reported to be missing in the north-eastern Nigerian state of Borno after being attacked by suspected militants at the weekend.

    Witnesses said the victims from the town of Rann were fired on by gunmen on motorbikes when they went into the bush to fetch firewood.

    Several escaped with bullet wounds.

    It’s feared that dozens of others have been abducted or killed.

    It’s not clear who carried out the attack, but both Boko Haram and another militant group linked to the Islamic State have been waging an insurgency in the region.

    Nigerian security forces have not yet commented on the raid.

    Source: BBC

  • Cameroon’s ‘King Solomon’ dies aged 97

    Cameroon’s Mankon community are mourning their paramount ruler, Fon Angwafor III Solomon, who has died aged 97.

    Fondly referred to as King Solomon the Wise, he was an influential political figure who was one of the architects of the reunification of English-speaking Southern Cameroons and francophone La République du Cameroun in 1972.

    Fon Angwafor III Solomon went on to become an MP, then the first national president of the ruling CPDM party for decades – although he was rarely received in audience by the party leader, President Paul Biya.

    The late paramount ruler had also studied agriculture in neighbouring Nigeria, and together with his children cultivated a variety of crops and exotic fruits.

    Fon Angwafor has been through the thick and thin of Cameroonian politics. His palatial residence in the heart of Bamenda was burnt during the tense period when multi-party democracy was reintroduced in Cameroon.

    While several traditional rulers escaped from the current bloody conflict the English-speaking regions, he stayed put until his disappearance – which is how his death is being referred as.

    According to the tradition of the Mankon people, their king has simply disappeared. They believe Fon Angwafor III has spirited himself away to meet his ancestors.

    On the lighter side, many will remember him as a giant man with an extremely big shoe size that tickled many.

    Meanwhile, a new king has been chosen. He is Fru Asah Angwafor, an educationist.

    Source: BBC

  • Egyptian tycoon jailed for assaulting orphan girls

    A court in Egypt has sentenced a media tycoon with close links to the government to three years in jail for his involvement in human trafficking and the indecent assault of underage girls at an orphanage he founded.

    Mohamed El-Amin – who owned a number of influential media outlets – was arrested earlier this year after allegations of sexual abuse at the orphanage were made public by a humanitarian organisation called Missing Children.

    The public prosecutor said that he had exploited his authority and the girls’ vulnerability.

    El-Amin has denied the charges and will be able to appeal against the sentence.

    Source: BBC

  • Partygate: Boris Johnson facing questions after photos emerge

    Boris Johnson is facing fresh questions after photos showing the prime minister drinking at an event during a Covid lockdown were published.

    The pictures, released by ITV News, are believed to show the prime minister at a leaving party on 13 November 2020.

    The BBC has been told that at least one person who attended the event was fined, but the PM was not.

    The Metropolitan Police are facing calls to explain why Mr Johnson did not receive a fine.

    A government source told BBC News the photos may have been taken by the official No 10 photographer and proved Mr Johnson was there in a work capacity.

    The police investigated two events in Downing Street on 13 November. Asked in Parliament by a Labour MP whether a party had taken place on that date, Mr Johnson said “no”, adding that “I’m sure…all the rules were followed”.

    Meanwhile, a government source has also told the BBC that civil servant Sue Gray may hand her report on parties to Downing Street on Wednesday, followed by a statement in Parliament and a press conference by the prime minister.

    Responding to the leaks, Labour’s Jonathan Ashworth said it would be difficult for the PM to reconcile his statement to Parliament that no party had taken place with the pictures and called on Tory MPs to remove him from office.

    The peer and former leader of the Scottish Conservatives, Ruth Davidson, said the prime minister had lied to Parliament and his position was now untenable.

    Senior Conservative Tom Tugendhat was also critical telling the BBC that: “Seriousness in government matters. It costs us all. And I’m afraid this just doesn’t look serious.”

    But Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said that while he found the picture “difficult to look at”, he suggested the presence of the PM’s ministerial red box “suggests he was probably on his way through”.

    “I think he’s popped down there to raise a glass and say thank you to a long term member of staff who is leaving,” he said, adding that the police would have “thoroughly investigated” the event.

    Boris Johnson at Downing Street partyIMAGE SOURCE, ITV

    A No 10 spokeswoman said the prime minister would address Parliament “in full” after senior civil servant Sue Gray published her report into the gatherings “in the coming days”.

    There was support for the PM from Conservative backbench MP Sir Desmond Swayne, who said he believed it was a “work do”, adding “that’s what people do at work”.

    He told BBC Newsnight: “Now I understand entirely the public anguish at a time when they were locked down and they were not supposed to be together, but there clearly was a distinction between the workplace – where people work together and are effectively in a bubble – and what was taking place outside.”

    Source: BBC

  • Heard’s team change course on Johnny Depp testimony

    Amber Heard’s team will not call Johnny Depp to the stand, a source close to Ms Heard said, a strategic U-turn in the last days of the high-profile trial.

    Ms Heard’s team had planned to call Mr Depp for more questioning on Monday, but changed course without explanation at midday.

    Mr Depp, 58, sued his ex-wife for $50m (£40m) for a column she wrote in which she claimed to be a victim of domestic abuse. Ms Heard, 36, has countersued.

    The case is expected to wrap this week.

    British supermodel Kate Moss, a former girlfriend of Mr Depp, is among witnesses expected to take the stand in the remaining days of the defamation trial.

    On Monday, the court in Fairfax, Virginia, heard from several witnesses called by Ms Heard’s team, including psychologist David Spiegel.

    Dr Spiegel testified that Mr Depp “has behaviours that are consistent with someone that both has substance use disorder as well as behaviours of someone who is a perpetrator of intimate partner violence”.

    About 40-60% of intimate partner violence is committed under the influence of alcohol or substance use disorders, Dr Spiegel told jurors.

    Mr Depp’s lawyers sought to undermine this testimony on cross-examination, highlighting that Dr Spiegel had reached his conclusions without any direct contact with Mr Depp.

    Also on Monday, a hand surgeon testified it was unlikely that Mr Depp’s finger was cut during a fight with Ms Heard in Australia in the way that he has described.

    Mr Depp has said the tip of his middle finger was severed when Ms Heard threw a vodka bottle at him.

    The jury saw graphic images of Mr Depp’s injured finger as Dr Richard Moore said that the damage was more consistent with being pinched by a closing door.

    Dr Moore did not physically examine Mr Depp at the time of the injury.

    Ms Heard’s team is expected to rest its case early this week before Mr Depp’s team takes its final chance to sway the jury.

    In Cannes, France on May 15, 1998-Johnny Depp and Kate MossIMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Kate Moss and Johnny Depp in Cannes in 1998

    The testimony from the two medical doctors on Monday was just the latest in a long line of competing expert testimony. One psychologist, called by Mr Depp’s team, testified that Ms Heard suffers from two personality disorders.

    Another, called by Ms Heard’s team, rejected this finding and said instead that Ms Heard had post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Ms Heard and Mr Depp have each testified in the weeks-long battle, offering starkly different accounts of their brief, tempestuous marriage.

    Ms Heard claimed Mr Depp was prone to alcohol and drug binges, easily triggered by feelings of jealousy and often consumed by violent rages.

    Mr Depp, in turn, alleged he was the victim of Ms Heard’s volatile moods, telling jurors he routinely endured her verbal, emotional and physical abuse.

    Source: BBC

  • Quad Summit: World faces ‘dark hour’ with Ukraine war, says Biden

    The world is “navigating a dark hour in our shared history” with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, US President Joe Biden told key Asian allies.

    The war has now become a “global issue” underscoring the importance of defending international order, he said.

    Japanese PM Fumio Kishida also echoed his comments, saying that a similar invasion should not happen in Asia.

    Mr Biden is meeting the leaders of Japan, Australia and India in Tokyo in his first visit to Asia as president.

    The four countries known collectively as the Quad are discussing security and economic concerns including China’s growing influence in the region – and differences over the Russian invasion.

    Mr Biden’s comments come a day after he warned China that it was “flirting with danger” over Taiwan, and vowed to protect Taiwan militarily if China attacked, appearing to contradict a long-standing US policy on the issue.

    In his opening remarks at Tuesday’s summit, Mr Biden said their meeting was about “democracies versus autocracies, and we have to make sure that we deliver”.

    The Ukraine war, he said, “is going to affect all parts of the world” as Russia’s blockade of Ukraine grain exports worsens a global food crisis.

    Mr Biden promised the US would work with allies to lead the global response, reiterating their commitment to defend international order and sovereignty “regardless of where they were violated in the world” and remaining a “strong and enduring partner” in the Indo-Pacific region.

    While Quad leaders will be looking to present a united front, there are differences.

    India is the only Quad member so far that has refused to directly criticise Russia for the invasion. In his opening remarks at Tuesday’s summit, Indian PM Narendra Modi did not mention the issue.

    Australia’s new PM Anthony Albanese meanwhile emphasised his country’s commitment to regional security and climate change.

    What is the Quad – and why is China a concern?

    Formally referred to as the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, the Quad began as a loose grouping of countries following the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami that banded together to provide humanitarian and disaster assistance. The group fell dormant before it was resuscitated in 2017.

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, US President Joe Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wave to the media prior to the Quad meeting at the Kishida's office in Tokyo on May 24, 2022.IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Australia’s Anthony Albanese, US’ Joe Biden, Japan’s Fumio Kishida and India’s Narendra Modi met on Tuesday

    Since then however, the top leaders have gathered for the fourth time – they have already met once in Washington last September and twice virtually – in less than two years.

    Analysts say the steady decline in each Quad nation’s bilateral ties with China in the past few years appears to have given the grouping more impetus.

    There has been mounting discomfort with China’s growing assertiveness in the region, with ongoing maritime disputes between China and several countries, and a land boundary conflict with India.

    Beijing’s heavy investment in strengthening its navy and its recent security pact with the Solomon Islands has stoked fears in Australia, while Japan has become increasingly wary of what it calls routine “incursions” from the Chinese navy in its waters.

    In a move to preserve US interests in the region, Mr Biden unveiled the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF) on Monday – a new US-led trade pact aiming to promote regional growth that includes 13 countries, mostly in Asia.

    US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo called it an “important turning point in restoring US economic leadership in the region” that would provide countries “an alternative to China’s approach”.

    Officials said it would set standards in the areas of trade, supply chains, clean energy and infrastructure, and tax and anti-corruption.

    Source: BBC

  • Second Meeting of 8th Parliament begins today

    Parliament resumed sitting today, Tuesday, May 24, 2022, for the Second Meeting of the Eighth Parliament.

    This was contained in a release signed by the Clerk to Parliament, Cyril Oteng Nsiah.

    His summon came on Standing Order 32 of the House which empowered the clerk to give a written notice to Members of Parliament (MPs) on the commencement of a meeting of the House.

    The Second Meeting will run till August before the House goes on another recess.

    Government business

    It will be the time for the consideration of government programmes and bills.

    The mid-year budget will also be presented by the Minister of Finance to Parliament during the Second Meeting in July.

    Privileges Committee

    One issue that is pending and will come up during the Second Meeting is the report of the Privileges Committee on the three MPs referred to it by the Speaker, Alban Bagbin, following their continuous absence from the last meeting.

    The three are the MP for Dome Kwabenya, Sarah Adwoa Safo; MP for Assin Central, Kennedy Ohene Agyapong; and MP for Ayawaso Central, Henry Quartey.

    The Privileges Committee was given two weeks to sit on the matter and present its report to Parliament on resumption.

    Recall

    The House rose on Tuesday, April 5, 2022, for the Easter break after the First Meeting of the Eighth Parliament.

    Source: Graphiconline

  • Lands Commission flood: Your land documents are intact Deputy Lands Minister assures

    Deputy Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, responsible for Lands and Forestry, Benito Owusu-Bio, has assured Ghanaians that all land documents at the Lands Commission Accra Regional office are safe and intact.

    He said this in contrast to a news report circulating on social media that rains have destroyed all land documents at the Greater Accra Regional Lands Commission head office including those of Achimota forest.

    Addressing the media during an inspection of the flooded offices at the Lands Commission on Monday, May 23, Mr Benito said, “Yes, it is true the rain got into the building from the construction site next door but upon inspection on arrival to verify the reports, nothing has been  destroyed as most documents were safely placed on shelves above floor level.”

    He further stated that even documents that were wet by the rainwater have been promised to be replaced.

    “The Executive Secretary has assured us that all the documents the water got into will be reprinted and replaced. The electronic data are also intact and so there is no cause for alarm.”

    The Deputy Minister said moving forward, they are going to ensure that no documents are kept on the floor in the offices to ensure such an occurrence does not repeat itself.

    He stressed that the rain was an act of God which could not have been predicted and therefore should not be linked to the Achimota Forest land saga or any other land matter whatsoever as it will be unfair if that is considered.

    Mr Owusu-Bio gave a word of encouragement and appreciation to the employees of the Lands Commission for their hard work regardless of all current happenings, saying: “we see your efforts and we appreciate it, Keep up the good work,” he said.

    Lands Commission flood: Your land documents are intact - Deputy Lands Minister assuresSource: GNA

    Executive Secretary of the Lands Commission, Mr. James Dadson, pointed out that the main offices that were affected include the basement, records, records annex and the digital capturing room but he was also quick to add that most of the documents affected by the rain have been retrieved and dried up by the sun, adding that those that could not dry will be reprinted and replaced.

    Mr. Dadson also assured the media and Ghanaians that the rains did not interrupt their work in any way, adding that they will be ready to work, anytime they are called upon.

    “This has not disrupted any of our work. As a matter of fact, we have restored lights to all the affected offices and we are ready and will be at your service anytime we are called upon to work,” he concluded.

    Source: MyJoyOnline

  • OccupyGhana calls for suspension of reclassification of Achimota Forest Reserve

    Civil Society Organisation (CSO), OccupyGhana, has demanded the suspension of the operation of Executive Instrument (E.I) 144 by government.

    In a letter dated May 23, 2022, the CSO said, “We write to demand that you revoke or suspend the operation of the Forests (Cessation of Forest Reserve) Instrument, 2022 (EI 144) and the Forests (Achimota Firewood Plantation Forest Reserve) (Amendment) Instrument, 2022 (EI 154) forthwith.”

    OccupyGhana added that “Instead, we demand a full public inquiry under Chapter 23 of the Constitution into the matter of the Achimota Forest Reserve.

    OccupyGhana alleged that since sending that letter to the Minister, “we have had further cause to believe that this state of affairs is worse and much wider than is apparent. We are also concerned that there might have been serious instances of conflict of interest and conflict of duty involving government officials and other government actors, concerning those lands.”

    OccupyGhana calls for suspension of reclassification of Achimota Forest Reserve

    The group also called on government to institute an inquiry into all alleged return of government lands to former owners that have occurred under the Fourth Republic.

    It would be recalled that last week, the President signed an Executive Instrument to declassify the Achimota Forest.

    The Instrument gazetted on behalf of President Akufo-Addo by the Lands Minister, Samuel Abdulai Jinapor, stipulated that effective May 1, 2022, the land on which the Forest is located shall cease to be a forest reserve, pursuant to Section 19 of the Forest Act, 1927 (CAP. 157).

    The cessation, per that document, was to be effective on May 1, 2022.

    However, the Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, Samuel Abu Jinapor, has said the government is not selling the land.

    According to him, plans are rather afoot to upgrade the Achimota Forest into a world-class asset.

    Addressing the press on Tuesday, May 17, the sector Minister emphasised that widespread reports about the supposed sale of the Forest are false and baseless, as government has no such plans.

    “The government intends to enrich the Achimota forest, revamp it and hopefully in the not too distant future, transform it into the likes of High Park of London and Central Park of New York, where Ghanaians can go and enjoy the beauty of nature and forest reserve as it happens in other parts of the world”.

    Source: MyJoyOnline

  • UG SRC sounds alarm on HANZ virus outbreak; cautions students

    The University of Ghana’s Students Representative Council (SRC) has issued a warning to students about the HANZ virus outbreak.

    HANZ virus (H3N2v) is a strain of influenza usually found in pigs, birds and humans.

    It is said to spread more easily to humans from pigs than other swine influenza viruses.

    In a press statement released on Saturday, May 21, the SRC urged students to be cautions on campus as the virus can be easily transmitted through droplets from infected persons through cough or sneeze.

    In view of this, students have been urged to practice hand hygiene, wearing of nose masks, avoid sharing of items such as tooth brush and cups.

    Symptoms of the virus include fever, cough, runny nose, body aches, nausea, chills, vomiting or diarrhoea.

    Also, the Council noted that the HANZ virus may cause severe diseases such as pneumonia.

    Meanwhile, the UG SRC has entreated students and staff exhibiting any of the aforementioned symptoms to report to a heath facility.

     

     

     

    Source: The Independent Ghana

     

  • Terrorism: Information Minister outlines things to be on the lookout for

    Citizens have been notified of procedures to take as the government strives to enhance the country’s security against terrorist attacks, according to Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah.

    He warned Ghanaians to remain attentive about anything out of the norm, during a press conference on Sunday, May 22.

    But those of particular interest, the Minister said, include:

    •  Non-residents seen mobilizing youth or circulating extremist material in person or virtually, with the objectives of whipping up sentiments to attack people are public installations. 
    • Abandoned packages in public places.

    Individuals who observe any peculiar activity, Mr Oppong Nkrumah said, should draw the attention of the Police, other security agencies and local community leaders immediately.

    Meanwhile,  Edward Asomani, the Deputy National Security Coordinator, has revealed that the government will on Tuesday launch the “See something, say something” campaign.

    This campaign will enable Ghanaians to report any unusual activity to the security agencies by dialing 999.

    “When you ring, you don’t even need to identify yourself because we have some individuals who are worried about identifying themselves when giving information,” he said.

    He told Ghanaians not to regard any information they find as irrelevant.

    “Let the security and intelligence agencies take that decision,” he added. 

    According to Mr. Asomani, the government is on top of the situation and remains unshaken; but, for Ghana to have a chance against terrorism, all citizens must help.

    Meanwhile, the Ministry of National Security has advised religious leaders to beef up security in their various places of worship across the country.

    Terrorist groups have been targeting public gatherings in the sub-region, necessitating increased security at places of worship, according to a press release issued by the Ministry on May 12.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Kylian Mbappe: France forward wants to ‘write more wonderful chapters’ at Paris St-Germain

    Kylian Mbappe says his decision to remain at Paris St-Germain was partly based on sentimental reasons – and believes there are “more wonderful chapters to write” at the club.

    The France striker, 23, rejected a move to Real Madrid to sign a new three-year contract with the Ligue 1 champions at the weekend.

    Spain’s La Liga reacted angrily to the news, calling the deal “scandalous”.

    “Leaving my country isn’t the right thing,” Mbappe said.

    “There is a sentimental aspect to this. It is my country.

    “The ongoing project has changed as well. That has made me want to stay here because I don’t think my story is over yet.

    “That goes for me collectively and individually. I think there are many more wonderful chapters to write.”

    ‘We want to win the Champions League’

    Mbappe started his career at Monaco before moving to PSG in 2017, initially on loan before joining permanently.

    Since being at the club he has won four Ligue 1 titles and three French Cups.

    Champions League success has so far eluded PSG but the club’s president Nasser Al-Khelaifi believes that, with Mbappe now staying, European glory can be achieved.

    “We want to create more trophies. We have won plenty so far, we want to win many more,” he said.

    “We want to win the Champions League. We are headed down the same path with our sporting goals.”

    There had been reports PSG offered Mbappe more control over sporting decisions in an effort to convince him to stay.

    But the forward said his sole focus and responsibility for the club is what he can do on the pitch.

    “I remain a footballer, who is part of a team, and I will not go beyond this role,” added Mbappe.

    “Everyone knows that last year I wanted to leave and I was convinced that it was the best choice, but the years go by and things change.”

    ‘Ligue 1 needs respect as well’

    In its response to Mbappe’s decision to stay at PSG, La Liga announced plans to file a complaint to Uefa as well as French and EU authorities.

    As well as calling the deal “scandalous”, La Liga president Javier Tebas said it “threatens the economic sustainability of European football”.

    But Al-Khelaifi responded: “Maybe it is a good thing if Ligue 1 is doing better than La Liga.

    “La Liga isn’t what it was three or four years ago. I have respect for all the clubs, but we need respect as well.

    “We have the best player in the world, that’s what matters to us. As for what other people are saying, that is not an issue. I am not listening to that.”

    Source: BBC

  • Erik Ten Hag says taking Manchester United job is not a risk to his reputation

    Erik ten Hag says he is not risking his managerial reputation by taking the Manchester United job.

    The Dutchman, 52, is United’s fifth permanent boss since Sir Alex Ferguson retired in 2013.

    “I don’t see it as a risk,” he said. “I think this club has a great history, and now let’s make a future.”

    Ten Hag also suggested Cristiano Ronaldo would not be leaving, adding he expected there to be goals from the Portugal forward next season.

    The former Ajax boss was speaking to reporters at his official unveiling as United manager 24 hours after watching his new club lose 1-0 at Crystal Palace on the final day of the season.

    Their points tally of 58, though good enough to secure sixth and a place in the Europa League, is their poorest return since 1989-1990 and comes just a year after they finished second behind Manchester City.

    Ten Hag did not say how many players he felt the club needed to bring in over the summer, instead answering that he was still “in the process of analysing” his squad.

    “The plan is huge and we only have a short time,” he added.

    “I’m looking forward to working with these players. The season before, this squad was second in the league, so there is huge potential. I think if we improve, if we work with them, I think we can get out more than what was the result from this season.”

    Ten Hag also did not give any guarantees over Harry Maguire remaining as captain.

    “Next season is a different season but he did a great job,” he said of the England international. “He’s a great player he achieved already a lot so I’m looking forward to working with him.”

    Asked if 37-year-old Ronaldo, who finished as United’s top scorer with 24 goals, was part of his plans, he replied “of course”.

    Klopp-Guardiola era ‘can come to an end’

    It is now nine years since Manchester United last lifted the Premier League, with the title race now dominated by Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City and Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool, who have won the last five titles between them.

    Ten Hag, though, is hopeful he can break their stranglehold on the trophy.

    “In this moment I admire them both,” he said. “They play fantastic football but you will always see an era can come to an end.

    “I look forward to a battle with them and I’m sure other clubs will want to do that.”

    The Dutchman also revealed he sought the advice of compatriot and former Red Devils boss Louis van Gaal, who had previously suggested Ten Hag should consider his options carefully before accepting the job.

    Van Gaal, who won the FA Cup during his spell in charge at Old Trafford between 2014 and 2016, said Ten Hag needed to join a “a football club not a commercial club”.

    “I have heard [Van Gaal’s comments] but I will draw my own line. I’m convinced it won’t be the case,” he said.

    “I spoke with the directors about it. Football is one, two and three at this club and every club these days is commercial. Every club needs it, needs the revenues to be at the top, to do it is necessary but football is one, two, three at this club.”

    Source: BBC

  • Dozens feared trapped after 10-storey building collapses in Iran

    Five people have been killed and dozens more are thought to be trapped after an unfinished building collapsed in south-west Iran, state media report.

    The Iranian Red Crescent said rescue teams were searching for at least 80 people in the rubble of the 10-storey Metropole office block in Abadan.

    Pictures showed that concrete floors and steel beams had fallen on to the street below, crushing several cars.

    Officials said the cause of the collapse was under investigation.

    State news agency Irna reported that the Metropole building was located on Abadan’s busiest commercial street, and that the incident happened at about 12:30 (08:00 GMT) on Monday.

    Rescue workers and bystanders search through the rubble of a collapsed building in Abadan, Iran (23 May 2022)IMAGE SOURCE, TASNIM NEWS/AFP
    Image caption, The Metropole building was located on one of Abadan’s busiest commercial streets

    Twenty-five injured survivors had so far been pulled from the rubble along with the five dead, it said.

    The hardline Tasnim news agency cited an official in Abadan’s fire department as saying that between 100 and 150 people are thought to have been inside the building at the time of the collapse despite it being under construction.

  • Ukraine war: Russian soldier Vadim Shishimarin jailed for life over war crime

    A court in Ukraine has jailed a Russian tank commander for life for killing a civilian at the first war crimes trial since the invasion.

    Captured soldier Sgt Vadim Shishimarin was convicted of killing Oleksandr Shelipov, 62, in the north-eastern village of Chupakhivka on 28 February.

    He admitted shooting Mr Shelipov but said he had been acting on orders and asked forgiveness of the man’s widow.

    Many other alleged war crimes are being investigated by Ukraine.

    And in a conflict where the deliberate targeting of civilians has become one of the defining features, Monday’s outcome sets a significant legal precedent.

    Moscow has always denied its troops have targeted civilians, despite a wealth of evidence to the contrary, while Ukraine says more than 11,000 crimes may have occurred.

    Ukraine, however, is likely to bring more cases like this to unpick Moscow’s blanket denials.

    This sentencing is unlikely to lead to an immediate change in tactics from the invading forces, but it does bring Oleksandr Shelipov’s widow Kateryna Shelipova justice.

    Imposing the life sentence, Judge Serhiy Agafonov said Shishimarin, 21, had carried out a “criminal order” by a soldier of higher rank.

    “Given that the crime committed is a crime against peace, security, humanity and the international legal order… the court does not see the possibility of imposing a [shorter] sentence of imprisonment,” he said.

    Shishimarin, wearing a blue and grey hooded sweatshirt, watched proceedings silently from a reinforced glass box in the courtroom and showed no emotion as the verdict was read out.

    His lawyer said an appeal would be lodged against the verdict.

    The Kremlin’s response is already in motion, with laws being drafted and courts being set up in Russia to try some Ukrainian prisoners as war criminals.

    This suggests both countries could soon find themselves in a legal tit-for-tat while the conflict rages on.

    Image shows Kateryna Shelipova at trialIMAGE SOURCE, EPA
    Image caption, ‘What did my husband do to you?’ widow Kateryna Shelipova asked the Russian soldier during the trial

    Shishimarin served in Russia’s Kantemirovskaya tank division. At the time of the killing, he and other soldiers were travelling in a car they had seized after their convoy came under attack and they became separated from their unit.

    When they spotted Mr Shelipov, he was speaking on his phone, Shishimarin told the court. He said he was told to shoot him with an assault rifle.

    His defence lawyer told the court on Friday that Shishimarin had only fired after twice refusing to carry out the order to shoot and that only one out of three to four rounds had hit the man.

    He said Shishimarin fired the rounds out of fear for his own safety and he questioned whether the defendant had intended to kill.

    In one dramatic moment, the victim’s widow Kateryna Shelipova confronted Shishimarin. “Tell me please, why did you [Russians] come here? To protect us?” she asked, citing Russian President Vladimir Putin’s justification for the invasion of Ukraine.

    “Protect us from whom? Did you protect me from my husband, whom you killed?”

    The soldier had no answer to that. Asking forgiveness of the widow earlier, he said: “But I understand you won’t be able to forgive me.”

    Ms Shelipova told the BBC: “I feel very sorry for him but for a crime like that – I can’t forgive him.”

    Since President Putin sent Russian troops into Ukraine on 24 February, at least 3,838 civilians have been killed and 4,351 injured, according to the UN.

    Among the dead are numerous suspected victims of war crimes in occupied towns such as Bucha.

    Earlier this month, the BBC obtained CCTV footage of the killing of two civilians in cold blood allegedly by Russian soldiers, a case now being investigated by prosecutors as a suspected war crime.

    Source: BBC

  • One shot dead, five arrested over land dispute

    One person has been shot dead after a renewed communal conflict between some residents of Doba in the Kassena-Nankana Municipality and Kandiga in the Kassena-Nankana West District of the Upper East Region.

    Five people have been arrested in connection with the clash and are in police custody assisting with investigations.

    The Public Relations Officer of Upper East Regional Police Command, Assistant Superintendent of Police, David Fianko-Okyere has explained that the clash occurred on Sunday evening [May 22, 2022.]

    He said the renewed clash was related to a recent land dispute in the area between the chiefs and people of the two communities.

    According to ASP Fianko-Okyere, calm has been restored to the area.

    The communal conflict started in 2020 when the two communities claimed ownership of a land on which a Police post and a Community-based Health Planning and Services (CHPS) compound were to be constructed.

    The conflict then led to gunshots from the two factions leading to loss of lives, destruction of property such as houses and farmlands particularly through burning.

    It also led people to seek shelter elsewhere, prompting the Upper East Regional Security Council (REGSEC) to form a joint military and police operation team to keep the place calm and maintain law and order. The Ministry of the Interior has also imposed a curfew in the area.

    Source: Graphic online

  • Social media reacts to late Sir John’s will involving the Achimota Forest

    Ghanaians on Twitter have been analyzing the purported will of Kwadwo Owusu Afriyie, also known as Sir John, who died on July 1, 2020.

    This is because Sir John, who served as the Forestry Commission’s Chief Executive Officer until his death, is said to have left portions of the Achimota Forest to family in his Will, which was certified on May 21, 2020.

    According to the Fourth Estate, the former NPP general secretary held almost 6 acres of land in the Achimota Forest.

    His successors, Yaw Amoateng Afriyie, Eva Akua Afriyie, Ivy Akua Afriyie, Elizabeth Asare Boateng (aka Mother) will each receive an acre of the land.

    Sir John, is said to have owned plots of land at East Legon, East Airport Hills, Oyarifa, Sakumono, Ogbojo, Ahenema Kokoben, Millenium City Estates, Adentanman Business District.

    The tall list of properties Sir John allegedly owned including a six bedroom house at Patangbe Avenue, has taken users by surprise. They are now questioning what assets other leaders in the country may own.

    Meanwhile, Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, Samuel Abu Jinapor, has requested all papers relating to the lands in the alleged Will as part of an initial investigation to determine the truth of the claims.

    The Achimota Forest Reserve recently became a topical issue after the government announced that portions of the land will be returned to the allodial owners, the Owoo family.

    The Minority Group in Parliament is against government’s decision. As Ghanaians wonder about what the next step regarding the Achimota Forest will be, the will of Sir John has made its way into the discussion.

    Below are more comments on Twitter:

     


    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • 3-year-old girl in critical condition after mud house collapsed on her

    A three-year-old girl is battling for her life after a mud house collapsed on her at Breman Kwanankwaa in the Central Region on Sunday morning.

    The victim, Maame Esi, was asleep when the building collapsed.

    Report gathered by Kasapa News Yaw Boagyan revealed that the mother of the victim and her two other siblings run away when the building was about to collapse, leaving the victim in the room alone.

    The little girl sustained serious injuries and was rushed to the Our Lady of Grace Government Hospital at Breman Asikuma for treatment.

    Speaking in an interview, Mr. Felix Kwetey a Unit Committee Chairman for Breman Kwanankwaa said, treatment delayed for over three hours until the Unit Committee Members in the community mobilized funds to support the family.

    He therefore appealed to the general public to assist the family in terms of funds to take care of the victim.

    Source: Ghanaweb via kasapafmonline

  • C/R: Two mobile money fraudsters arrested at Kasoa, 2 others on the run

    The Kasoa District Police Command has arrested two notorious Mobile Money fraudsters who defrauded a vendor of GH1,000 at Kasoa New Market in the Awutu Senya East District of the Central Region.

    Report gathered by Kasapa FM, revealed that four gentlemen in a Toyota Camry black colour with the registration number GC 9123 21 went to a mobile money vendor and asked the latter to deposit GH1000 into their account.

    Right after the money hit their account, the suspects quickly entered the car and sped off without giving the vendor the physical cash.

    The vendor then hired a motor bike and gave them a hot chase leading to the arrest of two under the Kasoa Overhead.

    The other two managed to escape and are on the currently on the run.

    It took the intervention of some residents to save the two suspects as they were nearly lynched.

    The Suspect are in the custody of Kasoa Police Custody to assist police investigation.

    According to the police they will be arraigned before the law court on Monday.

    Source: Ghanaweb via Ghanaguardian

  • AC Milan win Serie A for first time in 11 years

    AC Milan won their 19th Serie A title but the first for 11 years by cruising to victory at Sassuolo.

    Olivier Giroud scored twice with Franck Kessie also on target for the visitors.

    The title triumph vindicates Milan’s decision to appoint Stefano Pioli as manager in 2019 – a move that was initially unpopular with Pioli having led city rivals Inter for six months.

    Inter finished two points back, a final-day 3-0 victory over Sampdoria ultimately in vain.

    Napoli were third after a 3-0 win at Spezia while Juventus ended their disappointing season under Massimiliano Allegri – who won the title with Milan in 2010-11 – by finishing fourth but qualifying for next season’s Champions League.

    England international Fikayo Tomori was part of Milan’s title-winning team in his first full season since his permanent move from Chelsea last summer.

    Pioli brings back glory days but has medal stolen

    Milan have suffered more than a decade of disappointment since the title for Allegri in 2011 but Italian Pioli has brought back the glory days.

    Former Serie A players such as Clarence Seedorf, Filippo Inzaghi, Sinisa Mihajlovic, Vincenzo Montella and Gennaro Gattuso have all since tried and failed to revive the former European champions.

    Veteran striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic was part of that last Milan side that won Serie A and at the age of 40 he lifted the trophy with the club for a second time.

    By winning the title, midfielder Daniel Maldini follows in the footsteps of his father Paolo Maldini, who won seven league titles with Milan, and grandfather Cesare Maldini with four.

    But Pioli left the title celebrations empty-handed after having his winner’s medal stolen.

    “They snatched my medal in the celebrations: if you can make an appeal I thank you, it is the only one I have,” he said.

    Thankfully, Serie A heard his appeal and have promised to give him another medal on Monday.

    Source: BBC

  • Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola says champions are ‘legends’

    Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola said his side were “legends” after they secured their fourth Premier League title in five seasons.

    City won the league by a point over challengers Liverpool with a stunning 3-2 comeback win against Aston Villa on the final day at Etihad Stadium.

    It is Guardiola’s 11th trophy in six years since coming to England.

    “We are legends. We will be remembered. This group of players are absolutely eternal in this club,” said Guardiola.

    “What we achieved, it is so difficult to do it. Sir Alex Ferguson with Manchester United has done it years ago – two or three times – now I realise again the magnitude of doing this. Now we are part of this.”

    City were 2-0 down to Villa with 15 minutes left before substitute Ilkay Gundogan scored twice, either side of midfielder Rodri’s goal, in a sensational five-minute comeback.

    Had they not won, Liverpool would have been champions.

    “The last game is always special – a lot of emotion,” Guardiola said. “Aston Villa gave everything but the first goal changed everything. We had to handle it.

    “When you win the Premier League in this country four times in five seasons, it is because these guys are so, so special.

    “Winning at home in front of our people is the best. The moment we equalised, we had the feeling we had the chance to score the third.

    “It was the best atmosphere I have ever lived since I am here. Hopefully tomorrow we can celebrate together in Manchester’s streets with our cigars and beers. I will bring my cigars, don’t worry.”

    Liverpool won 3-1 at home to Wolves but could do nothing to stop Manchester City defending their title.

    The top two sides lost just five games between them in the league all season.

    “The magnitude of the achievement is related to the magnitude of our rival and I have never seen a team like Liverpool in my life,” Guardiola added.

    “Congratulations to Liverpool – they have made us better and better each week.”

    Asked whether he planned to stay beyond his current contract, which expires at the end of next season, he added: “I don’t have the energy or desire to think about next season now.

    “Every season is more difficult. I would not betray the club – they give me probably the most incredible moments in my life but I have to feel it, the players have to feel it and the club has to feel it.

    “Now it is time to celebrate. We are champions again.”

    Forward Jack Grealish joined City for a British record £100m in August from Aston Villa and he said he was “nearly crying” when he finally got his hands on the Premier League trophy.

    It was the first time in 17 years that City had come from 2-0 down in a league game to win.

    “I’ve had a few moments in my life and in football but this is certainly right up there. I’ve come here to win trophies and to do it is unbelievable,” Grealish told BBC Radio 5 Live.

    “Truthfully I didn’t think we were going to win, I just didn’t. Sometimes you have those bad feelings in your head and I just didn’t think we were going to do it.”

    Forward Raheem Sterling, who spent three years at Liverpool, said Jurgen Klopp’s team had “pushed” City to achieve more success.

    “Each year we come in and we know how difficult it will be with the teams we have,” he said.

    “Liverpool are a great opponent and every year they push us to the wire and this is why we achieve stuff like this.”

    Belgian midfielder Kevin de Bruyne, who was named Premier League player of the year earlier this week, said his side fought until the end because they had nothing to lose.

    “You just go for it – you’re losing anyway. You want to change the situation and that’s what we did,” he added.

    ‘Proud to bring this title to Ukraine’

    Oleksandr Zinchenko
    Oleksandr Zinchenko was in tears at full-time as he wore the Ukrainian flag across his shoulders

    Ukrainian international Oleksandr Zinchenko came on at half-time for Manchester City and made an impact when he set-up the second goal for Rodri.

    He celebrated on the pitch afterwards with a Ukrainian flag draped across his shoulders, posing for photos, before wrapping it around the trophy.

    “[These are] unforgettable emotions for me – for all Ukrainians who at the moment are starving, and surviving in my country because of Russian aggression,” he said.

    “I am so proud to be Ukrainian and to bring this title to Ukraine, for all Ukrainian people, because they deserve it.

    “It means everything for me – I would die for these people and their support. What people gave me and what they have done for me during this period – the toughest period of my life – I am so appreciative and I will never forget this, never in my life.”

    ‘You won’t get many better seasons’

    Former Arsenal defender Martin Keown said it would have been a “travesty” if City had missed out on a trophy this season, with Liverpool having picked up the two domestic cups as well as setting up a Champions League final against Real Madrid.

    Former England striker Alan Shearer added: “What a team, what a season and what a standard of football we’ve witnessed.

    “It’s just unbelievable what Pep Guardiola’s got at Manchester City and what Jurgen Klopp has at Liverpool. It was a brilliant afternoon for the neutral.

    “I was nervous and I don’t really care who wins it – so god knows what those supporters were going through, as that was one tense afternoon. Incredible.”

    Liverpool boss Klopp said it was a “joy” to work with his players each week, but they needed “a bit more consistency in the first half of the season” to beat City to the title.

    However, he described their achievements this season as “insane” and said they had pushed “the best team in the world” to the final day.

    “[Finishing second] is the story of my life,” he said. “I’m still record-holder for not getting promoted in Germany with the highest points tally. You need to get more points than every other team, but we didn’t do that.

    “You can’t do more than give your absolute best and that’s what the boys did again. We chased the best team in the world to the wire. That’s absolutely special. We’ll build a team again and go again.

    “These boys played an insane season. This is not the end, just a result of the season.”

    Source: BBC

  • Nigerian police probe beheading of an MP

    Police in Nigeria are investigating the beheading of a local MP in the south-eastern state of Anambra barely a week after gunmen kidnapped him along with an aide.

    The discovery of Okechukwu Okoye’s mutilated body over the weekend has sparked outrage.

    Anambra’s state governor Charles Soludo described the killing as gruesome, barbaric and shocking.

    He announced a reward for information leading to the killers’ capture.

    It’s not clear who was behind the attack.

    Officials have blamed a banned separatist group for increasing violence in the region.

    The Indigenous People of Biafra, which is campaigning for a breakaway state, has denied involvement in recent attacks.

    Its leader, Nnamdi Kanu, is standing trial for terrorism and treason-related charges which he has denied.

    Source: BBC

  • Hundreds evacuated in SA amid renewed flooding

    Hundreds of residents have been evacuated in South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal province amid a high alert over renewed flooding.

    The province experienced deadly floods last month.

    Heavy rains have been pounding this weekend and the local administration is on high alert to prevent any loss of life.

    Local mayor Mxolisi Kaunda says no comprehensive report has been shared on the impact of the latest heavy rains but residents have reported destruction of infrastructure, News24 website reports.

    A level 10 warning – the highest and most severe level – issued by the weather service remains in place.

    Most of those affected by the April flooding have never recovered, according to local media.

    Houses were swept and roads destroyed during the April floods.

    KwaZulu-Natal floods: The South African family who lost nine children

    South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal province is still reeling from the country’s worst floods in 60 years, which killed about 435 people last month. Mass funerals are taking place, although many families are still unable to bury their loved ones because their bodies were swept away by the raging torrents, as the BBC Pumza Fihlani reports.

    Inside a white tent on a hillside just outside Pietermaritzburg, hundreds of people sit with their heads bowed before six coffins. A sombre church hymn pierces through the heavy silence.

    The unimaginable happened to the Mdlalose family. Slindile Mdalose, 43, and nine children aged between two and 10 years were killed in the floods that devastated KwaZulu-Natal in the most deadly natural disaster in the country’s history.

    They were sleeping when the violent water washed through, flattening their home. It has been three weeks and some of the bodies are yet to be recovered

    “To tell you the truth we are mad, we are numb. We can’t use our heads. This is too much to even comprehend,” the children’s uncle, Thokozani Mdlalose tells the BBC.

    He is wearing tinted glasses to conceal his pain but his cracking voice and quivering lip betray his struggle to keep his composure.

    “When you have to split your grief, you think of this one, you think of that [one]. It’s too much. It’s hard losing one person. It’s worse losing two. Ten is something else,” he says.

    Mourners at funeral
    Image caption, Family and friends have been mourning the death of 435 people in the floods

    The mass funeral of Slindile Mdalose and her five children – Uyanda, Lubanzi, Ziyanda, Asanele, Lulama – took place on a cool morning. She was also the aunt of four more children, who are still missing.

    “Knowing that we haven’t found them, that they might be decomposing somewhere out there – words can’t describe what is inside me right now. I can’t even gather my thoughts,” Mr Mdlalose says.

    He adds that the nine children were playful and full of laughter, and brought joy to the whole family.

    Their aunt, Nonkululeko Mdlalose, says when she last spoke to her sister on the phone just hours before they died, she could tell that her sister was afraid.

    It was raining heavily, unlike anything either of them had ever seen before. Still, they did not expect that it would lead to disaster, Nonkululeko Mdlalose says.

    “I’ve never felt this kind of pain. I thought I was a strong person but I realise that I’m not, that we will need help, I realise we will need counselling. This is too much for anyone to bear,” she adds.

    They are not the only ones grieving. The floods killed 435 people, and dozens of victims are still missing, leaving their families in unbearable limbo.

    Less than 200 have been buried so far, and at least 59 bodies remain unclaimed in mortuaries.

    A member South African Police Services (SAPS) Search and Rescue Unit guide their sniffer dog during search efforts to locate ten people who are unaccounted for from area of KwaNdengezi township outside Durban on April 15, 2022 after their homes were swept away following the devastating rains and floodingIMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Sniffer dogs have been used to find bodies buried under rubble

    Icebolethu Funeral Services, one of the biggest funeral homes in KwaZulu-Natal, has so far buried more than 70 victims.

    One of its managing executives, Mthokozisi Bhengu, says corpses are not in a good state because they had been submerged in water, and they need to be buried quickly to avoid their condition worsening.

    “Families have cultural practices they would like to follow, like burying everyone in a family at the same time but we’ve had to persuade those whose loved ones are still missing that whilst they’re still searching for the others, let us continue and bury the ones in the morgues and preserve their dignity,” he adds.

    In the case of unclaimed bodies, funeral parlours say, there is no consensus yet on what to do with them.

    One option being considered by officials is to extract their DNA and store the information, so that family members, if they ever come looking for their loved ones, can be taken to their graves – something that will hopefully give them some closure.

    Part of Caversham road in Pinetown has been washed away on April 12, 2022 in Durban, South AfricaIMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, The government declared the floods a national disaster

    The government and private donors have offered help to cover funeral costs but the claims process is said to be bureaucratic and slow, leading to further delays with burials.

    The head of the South African Funeral Parlour Association, Nomfudo Mcoyi, says the delays could have been avoided.

    “In future, the government should bring in industry experts from the beginning in a crisis. Let us tell you how best to do this,” she says.

    Ms Mcoyi adds that the delays are causing more trauma and stress for families.

    “We could have done it [the burials] easily without bodies decaying,” she says.

    Back at the funeral on a hill, KwaZulu-Natal premier Sihle Zikalala said the government was working to help all those in need.

    On rebuilding homes for families such as the Mdlaloses, he said the government was working on identifying suitable land to house new settlements for the displaced. Thousands of people have been left homeless and are living in shelters across the province.

    “The task of rebuilding KwaZulu-Natal cannot be achieved by our caring government alone. It requires that we entrench the new spirit of solidarity and patriotism that we have seen in our province,” he told the crowd.

    President Cyril Ramaphosa has acknowledged that more funds are needed than the initial $68m (£55m) set aside to rebuild KwaZulu-Natal and all that’s been lost.

    It’s a long road ahead for many people here – from those who’ve lost family to those who lost their homes or livelihoods. As the true picture of the devastation caused by the floods emerges, many will need all the help they can get.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine extends martial law until August

    Ukraine has extended martial law for three months until 23 August.

    President Volodymyr Zelensky first signed the decree, along with a general military mobilisation call, on 24 February and since then has extended it for a month on two occasions.

    On Sunday, Ukraine’s parliament voted by an absolute majority for a third extension as Russia continues to focus its offensive on the eastern Donbas region.

    Zelensky’s representative at the Constitutional Court, Fedir Venislavskyy, said the decision to extend it for 90 days this time is because a “counter-offensive takes more time than defence”.

    Under martial law, Ukrainian men aged 18-60 are banned from leaving the country unless they have special exemptions.

    Source: BBC

  • ‘I’m so proud to be Ukrainian’ – Man City’s Zinchenko

    After winning the English Premier League title for the fourth time with his club Manchester City, Ukrainian footballer Oleksandr Zinchenko has said he found it hard to even think about football after Russia invaded Ukraine in February.

    Speaking to Sky Sports after draping the Ukrainian flag around the Premier League trophy, an emotional Zinchenko called it an unforgettable moment.

    “I’m so proud to be Ukrainian,” he said. “I would love to one day bring this title to Ukraine, for all Ukrainian people, because they deserve it.”

    Zinchenko said the time since the invasion began was the “toughest period in my life”.

    In an interview with BBC Sport’s Gary Lineker soon after the start of the war, the Manchester City defender said he could not count the number of times he had cried since Russia’s invasion began.

  • Ukraine may be losing up to 100 lives every day in east – Zelensky

    Ukraine may be losing between 50-100 lives in the east every day, President Volodymyr Zelensky says.

    He made this known during a press briefing on Sunday.

    He said those killed were defending Ukraine in “the most difficult direction”.

    Zelensky did not elaborate further but the comments appear to be a reference to military losses and are a sign of how fierce the fighting is in the east.

    Russian forces have stepped up their attempts to capture cities in the eastern Donbas region, with a focus on the city of Severodonetsk.

    Russia’s death toll equals that of Afghan conflict

    In its latest intelligence update, the UK’s Ministry of Defence (MOD) says that in the first three months of the war, Russia is likely to have suffered a similar death toll to that seen by the Soviet Union during its nine-year war in Afghanistan.

    The high casualty rate – seen in the Donbas offensive – can be explained by a combination of poor low-level tactics, limited air cover, lack of flexibility and “a command approach which is prepared to reinforce failure”.

    The MoD predicts those casualties, as they continue to rise, will become more apparent to the Russian public, and “public dissatisfaction with the war and a willingness to voice it may grow”.

    It is a pointed reference. The Soviet Union lost at least 15,000 soldiers in the Afghan conflict trying to prop up a communist government. The war became a bloody stalemate, and is viewed as a factor in the collapse of the Soviet Union.

    Source: BBC

  • Motorists urge government to fix potholes at Rawlings Park and its environs

    Motorists at Rawlings Park, Accra, have petitioned the government to improve the road, due to the numerous potholes it currently has.

    They explained in an interview with Citinews, that the reason for their request stems from the unending traffic congestion on that stretch everyday  due to the terrible nature of the road.

    “The issue of potholes started three or four years ago. The government is not working on it. When it rains, you are unable to determine where the potholes are.”

    According to them, this extends the time a motorist would normally take to cover that road, causing gridlock.

    In an attempt to salvage the situation, some people have filled the potholes with garbage. Whenever there is a downpour, the road becomes choked.

    They thus urged the media to publicise their predicament in the hopes of alerting the appropriate stakeholders.

    “Things are now expensive. Instead of the government to fix the road so we don’t damage our cars, nothing has been done. We need the media to draw the attention of the authorities to the situation.”

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Worshippers plead with government to remain at Achimota Forest

    Worshippers at Achimota Forest have asked the government not to relocate them because their actions have no impact on the facility.

    One of the devotees told Citinews that he was one of several who have had spiritual experiences at the location because the   environment aids them in mediation.

    He believes that if they are evicted, the country’s prosperity will suffer.

    “As a nation, it is going to affect us. We believe Ghana is a Christian nation. Our prayers are not affecting the Zoo. I will plead with the government to have a second thought. This is where we have been praying.”

    “This place has been a prayer camp for a very long time. This is where we pray and intercede on behalf of the country and our families,” another worshipper said.

    Some Christians have turned parts of the forest into prayer camps, where throngs of people go to commune with God.

    But because the government is returning parts of the Achimota Forest to the pre-acquisition owners, the Owoo family, the subject of eviction has surfaced.

    An Executive Instrument (E.I.) was published by the government to approve the redesignation and development of Achimota Forest.

    Minister for Lands and Natural Resources Samuel Abu Jinapor said the government wants to turn the Achimota forest reserve into a recreational area comparable to Central Park and High Park in New York and London, respectively.

    According to the family’s lawyer, John Edusei, the decision to keep portions of the forest is driven by the government’s failure to use the portions for its intended purpose.

    If the Owoo family ever purchases the declassified area, it has stated that it will try to ensure that the Achimota Forest is not damaged.

    In the meantime, the Minority in Parliament has requested that President Akufo-Addo reverse the Executive Instrument (E.I 144) declassifying areas of the Achimota Forest Reserve as soon as possible.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Ghana winger Osman Bukari returns to KAA Gent after successful loan spell with FC Nantes

    Ghana winger Osman Bukari is set to return to Belgian giants KAA Gent after a successful loan spell with FC Nantes in the French Ligue 1.

    Bukari joined Nantes on a season-long loan deal last summer from Gent and went on to become a fan favorite at the club.

    The 23-year-old played his final game for the Yellow Canaries in the 1-1 draw against Saint-Etienne on Saturday night.

    He played a key role in helping FC Nantes clinch the French Cup and finishing 9th on the table.

    It was the fourth time Nantes had won the French Cup and their first major trophy since 2001’s Ligue 1 title.

    The pacy winger made 24 French Ligue 1 appearances, scored two goals and provided four assists for FC Nantes.

    Bukari is expected to be named in Ghana squad for next month’s 2023 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers against Madagascar and Central Africa Republic. He will also travel with the team to Japan for the Kirin Cup.

    He helped Ghana qualify for the 2022 World Cup after featuring in the playoff against Nigeria.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Title, top four and relegation to be decided – Premier League set for dramatic final day

    Will Manchester City or Liverpool be champions? Can Tottenham seal a Champions League spot ahead of north London rivals Arsenal? Which of Burnley or Leeds are heading for the Championship?

    These are the main questions to be answered on what promises to be a dramatic and emotional final day of the 2021-22 Premier League season.

    It is the first time in 10 years that the title, top four and relegation are all still to be fully decided before the final day.

    BBC Sport takes a detailed look at everything at stake on what promises to be a gripping and tense finale.

    The BBC will be providing the usual coverage on Sunday, with live text commentary on all 10 games on the BBC Sport website and Radio 5 Live audio commentary on Manchester City v Aston Villa, with updates from around the grounds.

    As a special bonus, Final Score will be showing the goals and best action from the seven Premier League games not being shown live elsewhere – those being the matches at the Etihad, Anfield and the Brentford Community Stadium.

    City’s title to lose

    Premier League top two

    Manchester City hold a one-point advantage at the top of the table after their draw at West Ham and Liverpool’s victory at Southampton in the penultimate round of games.

    Few people expect the defending champions to surrender their lead, and not just because no side has ever started a Premier League final day top and not ended it there.

    The main reason is that City have been simply superb this season, winning 28 games to stay out in front despite Liverpool clawing back what was at one stage a double-digit lead.

    Pep Guardiola’s men host Aston Villa on Sunday, knowing a win would make Liverpool’s result at home to Wolves academic and seal a fourth league title of their Spanish manager’s six-season reign.

    Claiming the league crown would put some salve on the wounds inflicted on City in the latter stages of this season by the Reds, who beat them in the FA Cup semi-final, and Real Madrid, who stunned them with a late comeback in the Champions League last four.

    It would also deny Jurgen Klopp’s side a shot at a historic quadruple, with the Carabao and FA Cups already in the Anfield trophy cabinet and the Champions League final to come.

    All Liverpool can do is beat Wolves at home and hope Villa can do them a favour at the Etihad, with a draw no good for them because of their goal difference, even if City lose.

    This season is the third time in four campaigns that the pair have claimed the top two spots. If they match each other’s result on Sunday, it will be the second time, after 2018-19’s gripping race, that they have been separated at the top by just a point.

    North London tussle for fourth spot

    Premier League race for fourth spot

    Spurs are often mocked for doing things described as ‘Spursy’ – meaning throwing away leads and grasping defeat from the jaws of victory.

    It would take something especially ‘Spursy’ for them to miss out on a Champions League spot this season.

    Their hard-fought win over Burnley on Sunday, followed by Arsenal’s deserved defeat at Newcastle the following day, means Tottenham go into the final day two points ahead of their fierce rivals.

    With their vastly superior goal difference, Antonio Conte’s side can afford a draw at relegated Norwich.

    Only a win will do for Arsenal, who are at home to an Everton side now assured of Premier League football next season. If the Canaries can provide a dead cat bounce at Carrow Road and beat Spurs, a win will see the Gunners nick it.

    Premier League sixth and seventh

    There is also an outstanding European issue still to be settled a bit lower down the table, as Manchester United and West Ham fight it out on Sunday to decide who will be playing in the Europa League and who in the Europa Conference League.

    The sixth-placed Red Devils can end a disappointing season by sealing a Europa League spot with a win at Crystal Palace. Anything less, though, leaves the door open for the Hammers, who trail by two points in seventh but have a vastly superior goal difference.

    David Moyes’ side are at Brighton on Sunday, hoping to get another shot at a competition in which they reached the semi-finals this season.

    Below this there will be the usual jockeying for league placings on the final day, with each place higher in the division worth an estimated extra £3m.

    For a club like Aston Villa, for example, it could mean an extra £12m if they can lift themselves from 14th to 10th on the final day.

    Burnley or Leeds for the drop?

    Snapshot of the bottom of the Premier League table: 15th Southampton, 16th Everton, 17th Burnley, 18th Leeds, 19th Watford & 20th Norwich

    At half-time at Goodison Park on Thursday, it looked as though three sides would be battling it out to avoid joining Watford and Norwich in the Championship next season.

    But Everton’s remarkable comeback win over Crystal Palace leaves Burnley and Leeds to duke it out for survival on the final day.

    The pair are level on 35 points but the Clarets have the edge courtesy of a vastly superior goal difference, meaning they only need to match Leeds’ result on the final day to stay up.

    Mike Jackson’s side also have home advantage on Sunday, albeit against an in-form Newcastle side hoping to seal a top-half finish.

    Golden boot, gloves and the rest

    Manchester City and Liverpool are not just battling it out for the title – their respective goalkeepers are also locked in a tussle for the division’s golden gloves.

    City’s Ederson and Liverpool’s Alisson both have 20 clean sheets to their name.

    There is a very close race taking place at the top of the Premier League goalscorers charts too, with Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah currently one ahead of Tottenham’s Son Heung-min.

    Golden boot 2021-22
    Player Team Goals
    Mohamed Salah Liverpool 22
    Son Heung-min Tottenham 21
    Cristiano Ronaldo Manchester United 18

    If Salah prevails, it will be his third English golden boot after he came out on top in 2017-18 and 2018-19. For Son, it would be a first.

    With 18 goals to his name, it would take something truly special for Cristiano Ronaldo to muscle his way in, although the Portuguese has been performing remarkable goalscoring feats for much of his career.

    Speaking of Ronaldo, could Sunday be the final time we see him in Premier League action?

    The summer arrival of Erik ten Hag as Manchester United’s new boss is expected to mean a major overhaul at the club, with speculation that the 37-year-old could be one of those moved on.

    One player who will definitely be saying farewell to his club’s fans is Chelsea defender Antonio Rudiger, who has agreed to join Real Madrid this summer.

    The West Ham fans at Brighton’s Amex Stadium will be seeing the last of the retiring Mark Noble and the soon-to-be-out-of-contract Andriy Yarmolenko in a Hammers shirt.

    Will Sunday be the last Arsenal appearance of Alexandre Lacazette and Eddie Nketiah? Could Christian Eriksen be saying ‘thank you and goodbye’ to Brentford? Will cult hero Divock Origi get a last run-out at Liverpool?

    Potential answers to these questions and more will be provided on what promises to be a gripping Premier League 2021-22 finale.

    Source: BBC

  • Manchester City’s Kevin de Bruyne named 2021-22 Premier League player of the season

    Manchester City‘s Kevin de Bruyne has been voted the 2021-22 Premier League player of the season, while team-mate Phil Foden was named best young player.

    Belgium midfielder De Bruyne has scored 15 goals and registered seven assists, with City top of the league before the final day of the campaign on Sunday.

    “To win this award for a second time is an achievement that I am really proud of,” he said.

    Foden, 21, is the first player to win his prize in successive seasons.

    De Bruyne, 30, was chosen after the votes from the public on the Premier League website were combined with those of the 20 Premier League club captains and a panel of football experts.

    His City team-mate Joao Cancelo, Liverpool pair Mohamed Salah and Trent Alexander-Arnold, West Ham’s Jarrod Bowen, Arsenal’s Bukayo Saka, Tottenham forward Son Heung-min and Southampton midfielder James Ward-Prowse were also nominated.

    De Bruyne also claimed the honour in 2019-20 and joins Thierry Henry, Cristiano Ronaldo and Nemanja Vidic in winning it more than once.

    “There is so much quality in the Premier League and it is a pleasure to be nominated with so many other great players who have had incredible seasons for their clubs,” added De Bruyne.

    “I think my performances this season have been good and I am happy that I have been able to contribute with goals and assists throughout the season.”

    Foden secured the most combined votes from the public and a Premier League panel, to win the young player trophy for a second time.

    The England international has scored nine goals and provided five assists this season.

    Foden beat Alexander-Arnold, Crystal Palace’s on-loan Chelsea midfielder Conor Gallagher, Palace full-back Tyrick Mitchell, Chelsea midfielder Mason Mount, Arsenal duo Aaron Ramsdale and Saka, and West Ham midfielder Declan Rice to the award for players aged 23 or under.

    “I’m very proud to have won for a second season in a row,” he said.

    “I have been really happy with my performances this season and it has been great to contribute to this team in what will hopefully be another successful year for us all.

    “To be nominated alongside so many great players is an honour as they have all had great seasons for their clubs.”

    De Bruyne and Foden can help City retain the Premier League title on Sunday – when they host Aston Villa – as their side go into the final round of fixtures one point ahead of rivals Liverpool, who are at home to Wolverhampton Wanderers.

    Source: BBC

  • Governments should subsidise food and energy, says IMF boss

    Governments need to subsidise the cost of food and energy for the poorest members of society, the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has told the BBC.

    People around the world are struggling with the rising cost of living.

    Kristalina Georgieva said support needs to be provided “in a very targeted manner, preferably by providing subsidies directly to people”.

    Many governments are providing some help but critics argue it’s not enough.

    When it comes to the cost of living crisis, Ms Georgieva said: “There are two priorities, one the very poor people, segments of society that are now struggling with high food and energy prices”.

    The second, she added, is to support those businesses that have been “most damaged” by the war in Ukraine.

    The IMF’s role is to work with governments to stabilise the global economy and enhance prosperity.

    However, that’s proving challenging because food prices have hit record highs this year, whilst oil and gas prices have also risen sharply.

    Stallholder serving his customers as they go shopping for fruit and vegetables at Birmingham Open MarketIMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Food prices are soaring around the world because of the pandemic and the war in Ukraine

    This is largely because of the twin shocks of the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine. Between them, Russia and Ukraine are major exporters of crops and hydrocarbons.

    Recession fears

    The importance of these commodities to the global economy has led the annualised inflation rate to reach its highest point in decades in many countries: 9% in the UK, 8.3% in the US and 7.4% in the Eurozone.

    Central banks are lifting interest rates to try and slow the increase in prices, which has led some influential figures such as Goldman Sachs’ Lloyd Blankfein to warn of the risk of recession.

    Ms Georgieva is concerned about the impact those higher borrowing costs will have on governments who have to repay huge debts they took on to get through the pandemic.

    She said governments needed to be “very careful” about how much money they spent and what they spent it on.

    Chart showing inflation of UK and other countriesIMAGE SOURCE, AFP

    The problem of falling living standards was at the top of the agenda at this week’s meeting of G7 finance ministers in Germany.

    The meeting of seven wealthy countries ended with a pledge to “continue to work together to minimise the impact of the war globally as well as on our own economies and population by providing well-targeted support, where necessary”.

    Over the last few months, governments have made a range of interventions to try and lower the cost of living.

    In the US President Biden has released oil from reserves to try and bring prices down, Spain and Portugal have capped gas bills and it’s a leading issue in Australia’s election.

    In the UK Chancellor Rishi Sunak has made some tax changes and is considering a windfall tax on the soaring profits of energy companies.

    G7 finance ministers meeting in BonnIMAGE SOURCE, EPA
    Image caption, Finance Ministers from the G7 group of advanced economies are facing similar challenges

    Ms Georgieva is concerned that without the correct government support the protests seen in Sri Lanka could be repeated in other countries.

    Sri Lanka’s economic crisis, exacerbated by rising prices, has led to deadly riots, a new prime minister and a first ever default on its debts.

    The IMF boss said such similar unrest before the pandemic, from France to Chile, was caused by “a sense of inequality growing” and decisions being made without the support of the people.

    “If we are to learn any lessons from 2019 it is to be much more humble about policy decisions, and engage in multiple ways with people, because policies must be for people, not the paper we write them on,” she said.

    Feeding the world

    A group of international development bodies including the IMF and World Bank this week launched a major plan to try and tackle food insecurity around the world.

    It was spearheaded by US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who said it was necessary because: “There’s a very real risk that soaring global market prices of food and fertiliser will result in more people going hungry.”

    Ms Georgieva said that while there is plenty of food, it is not evenly distributed.

    The solutions, she said, are growing more crops where possible but also a greater focus on agricultural productivity, “not only because of the war, but because of climate change”.

    She added: “Trade needs to be retained open, we should not have a situation in which countries hold on to food more than they need and create all kinds of barriers for moving it from one place to another.”

    India is the world’s second-biggest wheat producer but has banned exports, just as other countries were looking for it to make up some of the shortfall from Ukraine’s inability to ship its produce. Narendra Modi’s government says that ban could be revised at some point.

    “I would really beg them to reconsider, that is such a difficult moment for the world,” Ms Georgieva said.

    “I understand they need to feed their people. They have 1.4 billion of them, but let’s all act in a collaborative manner because only if you do [that, do] we have a chance to overcome this crisis.”

    Source: BBC

     

  • Terrorism: Ghana must stay alert and not lose guard – Kwesi Pratt

    Seasoned Journalist, Kwesi Pratt Jnr., has outlined some measures to prevent terrorism from happening in Ghana as neighbouring countries have been hit by insurgent attacks.

    Countries such as Togo, Burkina Faso and Cote d’Ivoire among others have had terrorists infiltrating them and causing havoc to the citizenry.

    Ghana’s closest neighbour, Nigeria, has also been fighting Boko Haram, an Islamic insurgent group, that’s engaged in a series of mass murders.

    The acts of terrorism in the sub-region are a cause for alarm and there are predictions that Ghana may be a target if nothing is done to combat it.

    Speaking on Peace FM’s “Kokrokoo”, Kwesi Pratt Jnr. called for a strong security force along the borders of the country to avert any possible terrorist threats.

    He proposed to the government to well-equip the Ghana Navy and Armed Forces.

    Dwelling on the Ghana Navy, he said; “It is important to beef up the navy, its equipment and so on…Let’s make a good budget and equip the Navy properly in order for them to protest us…It will get worse if we allow these terrorists to have their way.”

    Mr. Pratt also called for an end to ethnic conflicts stating such conflicts could potentially fuel terrorism.

    “We should be vigilant about the ethnic conflicts, especially along our borders, so that it will not provide fertile grounds for these Islamic insurgents who are battling in the West African sub-region,” he stated.

    He cautioned the nation not to lose guard, thinking these terrorist acts are far from occurring in Ghana, but also rather called for concerted efforts in the West African sub-region against the Islamic insurgents.

    Source: Ghanaweb via Peacefm online

  • Over 100,000 people officially missing or disappeared in Mexico

    Mexico has officially registered more than 100,000 people as missing or disappeared, according to data from the Interior Ministry’s National Registry of Missing People.

    From 1964 to the present day, the country has registered more than 100,023 people missing, of which more than 24,700 are women, and more than 74,700 are men. The gender of 516 people is unknown.
    The figure has risen by more than 20,000 people in the past two years alone, according to the data, which was met with outrage and urgent calls for better systems for search and rescue.
    Families with disappeared loved ones protest in Mexico City on May 10.

    Families with disappeared loved ones protest in Mexico City on May 10.
    Only 35 of the disappearances recorded have led to the conviction of the perpetrators, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said in a statement Tuesday.
    “No effort should be spared to put an end to these human rights violations and abuses of extraordinary breadth, and to vindicate victims’ rights to truth, justice, reparation and guarantees of non-repetition,” said Bachelet.
    Marlene Harbig of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) discussed the trauma suffered by families with missing persons.
    “The first few hours are the most important, when someone disappears, their relatives have the right to know what has happened,” said Harbig in a news release. “Knowing the fate of disappeared persons is primarily a humanitarian act.”
    Despite the numbers, Bachelet highlighted progress made by the Mexican government, recognizing Mexico as the first country to allow a visit by the UN Committee on Enforced Disappearances to work with authorities in 13 Mexican states.
    Both the ICRC and the UN have called for family members to be allowed to work with government authorities in working to find their loved ones.
    According to a statement to the media, Michele Bachelet requested the government “to place the families of those who have disappeared at the center of their efforts, and to make the necessary resources available for investigations and searches to be effective.”
    Source: CNN
  • Spain eases Covid entry rules for UK travellers

    UK citizens who have not had a coronavirus jab can now travel to Spain by showing a negative PCR or antigen test on arrival.

    The Spanish government confirmed that non-vaccinated travellers from outside the EU can enter the country from Saturday.

    Fully vaccinated passengers will still need to show proof of vaccination.

    The UK removed all its remaining international Covid travel restrictions for entry on 18 March.

    This included passenger locator forms and tests for passengers who do not qualify as vaccinated.

    Other European countries followed suit, with Austria, Greece, Switzerland, Bulgaria, Croatia, Lithuania, Sweden, Serbia, Slovenia and Slovakia no longer having any Covid travel restrictions for visitors.

    Previously, heightened restrictions meant UK travellers were only allowed to enter Spain with vaccine certification or proof of recovery from the virus.

    As the latest wave of that strain dissipated, countries across the world loosened their Covid travel restrictions to welcome visitors again.

    And on Saturday, Spanish tourism minister Reyes Maroto said the “new phase of the pandemic” meant the country was able to relax the rules by equating non-EU travellers with those of the EU and Schengen-associated countries.

    “This is excellent news, much awaited by the tourism sector,” said Ms Maroto, adding: “Spain is becoming one of the most desired destinations in the world.”

    Source: BBC

  • Zelensky: Only diplomacy can end Ukraine war

    The war in Ukraine can only be resolved through “diplomacy”, President Volodymyr Zelensky has said.

    Speaking on national TV, he suggested his country could be victorious against Russia on the battlefield.

    However, he added that the war could only come to a conclusive halt “at the negotiating table”.

    Meanwhile, heavy fighting is taking place in and around Severodonetsk, as Russian forces step up efforts to seize the whole of the Luhansk region.

    The end of fighting in the southern port city of Mariupol has freed up Russian troops for redeployment elsewhere and allowed them to intensify their onslaught in the east.

    Local governor Serhiy Haidai said the Russians were “destroying” Severodonetsk as they gradually surrounded it.

    Writing on the messaging app Telegram, he said Ukrainian troops had repelled 11 attacks on the frontline – with eight tanks among the Russian vehicles destroyed. There was no independent confirmation of the claims.

    BBC correspondent James Waterhouse said Russia had increased its artillery and air strikes as well as missile attacks – gaining ground mile by mile in Luhansk while the Ukrainians are forced to retreat.

    In his TV address, Mr Zelensky said the conflict “will be bloody, there will be fighting, but it will only definitively end through diplomacy”.

    But he indicated this would not be easy, as neither side wanted to give anything up.

    On Tuesday, Kyiv’s lead negotiator, Mykhaylo Podolyak, said talks were on hold.

    The following day, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov accused Kyiv authorities of not wanting to continue talks to end hostilities.

    Russian news agencies say the last meeting happened nearly a month ago, on 22 April.

    With no end in sight to the fighting, the US is sending more military, economic and humanitarian aid.

    On Saturday, President Joe Biden signed a bill to provide a package for Ukraine worth nearly $40bn (£32bn), the White House said.

    The money represents the largest programme of American assistance since Russia launched its invasion in February.

    The bill, which will funnel support to Ukraine for about the next five months, includes some $6bn budgeted for armoured vehicles and air defences.

    President Zelensky tweeted his gratitude, saying military aid was “needed more than ever”.

    It also emerged on Saturday that President Biden is one of over 900 US citizens who have been indefinitely banned from entering Russia.

    The list also includes Secretary of State Antony Blinken, CIA chief William Burns and hundreds of members of Congress.

    In another development, Russia has switched off its gas supply to Finland after it refused Moscow’s demand to pay for fuel in Russian roubles.

    Source: BBC

  • US says ‘Hotel Rwanda’ hero Rusesabagina ‘wrongly detained’

    The United States has determined that Paul Rusesabagina, portrayed in the film “Hotel Rwanda” sheltering hundreds of people during the African nation’s 1994 genocide, has been “wrongfully detained,” the State Department said on Thursday.

    Rusesabagina, 67, was sentenced last September to 25 years in prison over eight terrorism charges tied to an organization opposed to Rwandan President Paul Kagame’s rule. He has denied all the charges and refused to take part in the trial that he and his supporters have called a political sham.
    “The determination took into account the totality of the circumstances, notably the lack of fair trial guarantees during his trial. This determination does not imply any position on his innocence or guilt,” a State Department spokesperson said.
    Rusesabagina, who was feted around the world after being portrayed by actor Don Cheadle in 2004’s “Hotel Rwanda,” is a vocal critic of Kagame. He is being held in a Rwandan prison.
    He has acknowledged having a leadership role in the Rwanda Movement for Democratic Change (MRCD), but denied responsibility for attacks carried out by its armed wing, the National Liberation Front (FLN). The trial judges said the two groups were indistinguishable.
    The “wrongfully detained” designation means the responsibility for the case will now be transferred from the State Department’s Bureau of Consular Affairs to the office of the Special Envoy for Hostage Affairs, effectively raising the issue’s political profile.
    Under 2020 legislation passed by Congress, there are criteria outlined in 11 points, based on which the Secretary of State can make the designation of wrongfully detained.
    Among those are the cases of individuals who are being detained solely or substantially because they are an American citizen or with the purpose of influencing U.S. government policy.
  • Covid in North Korea: No response to US vaccine offer

    President Joe Biden says North Korea has not responded to a US offer of Covid vaccines, as the country battles its first acknowledged outbreak.

    Nearly 2.5 million people have been sickened by “fever” in North Korea and it is under a nationwide lockdown, according to the country’s state media.

    It is thought to be particularly vulnerable because it has little testing or vaccine supply.

    Mr Biden announced the offer at a press conference in South Korea.

    “We’ve offered vaccines, not only to North Korea but to China as well, and we’re prepared to do that immediately,” Mr Biden said in a joint appearance with South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol.

    “We’ve got no response,” he added.

    The isolated regime of North Korea has previously turned down offers of vaccines from Covax, the global vaccine-sharing scheme, and from South Korea, as well as reportedly declining other offers.

    Instead, it claimed to have successfully kept Covid out of the country by sealing its borders, although experts believe the virus has been present there for some time.

    State media has recommended remedies such as herbal tea, gargling salt-water and taking painkillers such as ibuprofen, while the country’s leader, Kim Jong-un, has accused officials of bungling the distribution of national medicine reserves.

    China is also struggling to control a wave of infections from the highly transmissible Omicron variant, with tens of millions of people under some form of lockdown.

    At the news conference in the South Korean capital, Seoul, President Biden said he was willing to meet Mr Kim under the right circumstances.

    “It would depend on whether he was sincere and whether he was serious,” Mr Biden said.

    His predecessor, Donald Trump, held a historic summit with Mr Kim in Singapore in 2018 and became the first US president to set foot in North Korea the following year.

    But two years ago, Mr Kim questioned whether there was any need to continue “holding hands” with the US.

    The US and South Korean presidents also agreed to deploy American weapons if necessary to deter North Korea and to increase military drills – which had been scaled down in recent years in an effort to reduce tensions.

    Source: BBC

  • Australia election: Anthony Albanese signals climate policy change

    Australia’s new leader has vowed to take the country in a new direction, with a big shift in climate policy.

    Anthony Albanese, who won Saturday’s election with the opposition centre-left Labor Party, said Australia could become a renewable energy superpower.

    He is to be sworn in as PM on Monday, but it is not clear whether his party will have a majority in parliament.

    Climate change was a key concern for voters, after three years of record-breaking bushfire and flood events.

    Outgoing PM Scott Morrison, the leader of an ousted Liberal-National coalition, thanked the “miracle of the Australian people” after conceding.

    Vote counting is still going on, and it is unclear whether Labor can get 76 seats to secure a majority in the 151-member lower house of parliament.

    Final results may not be known for several days, as electoral officials have just started counting nearly three million postal votes.

    If the election results in a hung parliament, Greens and independents – who have been campaigning for radical climate change action – could wield greater influence in framing the new government’s policies on the issue.

    Speaking to the BBC’s Shaimaa Khalil shortly after his election victory, Mr Albanese, 59, said: “We have an opportunity now to end the climate wars in Australia.

    “Australian businesses know that good action on climate change is good for jobs and good for our economy, and I want to join the global effort.”

    Mr Albanese, who will be heading Australia’s first Labor government in almost a decade, also promised to adopt more ambitious emissions targets.

    However, he has so far refused calls to phase out coal use, or to block the opening of new coal mines.

    Source: BBC

  • Australia election: Anthony Albanese leads Labor to Australian election victory

    Anthony Albanese is set to become Australia’s next prime minister after leading the Labor Party to its first election victory in more than a decade.

    One of the country’s longest-serving politicians, he promised voters “safe change” as he worked to kick out the conservative Liberal-National coalition which has been in power since 2013.

    Where ousted Prime Minister Scott Morrison is a self-described “bulldozer”, Mr Albanese vows to be a “builder”.

    After the pandemic, which saw Australian states cut off from each other and cities splintered by strict lockdowns, fostering unity is a top priority for the new leader.

    “I want to bring Australians together. I want to seek our common purpose and promote unity and optimism, not fear and division,” he said in a victory speech on Saturday night.

    So who is Albo?

    Mr Albanese has earned a reputation as a defender of Australia’s free healthcare system, an advocate for the LGBT community, a republican, and a passionate rugby league fan.

    The 59-year-old – nicknamed Albo – was raised in social housing by a single mother on a disability pension. He has often cited his upbringing as the foundation for his progressive beliefs.

    Mr Albanese believed his father had died before he was born, but as a teenager he learned his mother had in fact fallen pregnant to a married man – who was very likely still alive – while travelling in Europe.

    Anthony Albanese, Australia Young Labour Delegate in Hobart. July 09, 1986IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Mr Albanese credits his humble beginnings as the foundation for his progressive beliefs

    Three decades later he tracked down Carlo Albanese, flying to Italy to meet his father for the first time, and his half-siblings.

    Mr Albanese said his mother, Maryanne Ellery, was determined to ensure he had opportunities that she never did. With her support, he became the first in his family to finish school and go to university.

    He has said creating a better world for his own son, Nathan, is the inspiration behind his public life. Mr Albanese separated from his wife of 19 years in 2019 but partner Jodie Haydon joined him on the campaign trail.

    MP for 25 years

    Mr Albanese has been the Labor Party leader for three years, taking over after the shock election defeat of predecessor Bill Shorten in 2019.

    But he has been a Labor Party stalwart since his 20s.

    He worked in both federal and state politics before he was elected on his 33rd birthday to an inner-city Sydney seat in 1996.

    In 2007, when Labor swept to power under Kevin Rudd, Mr Albanese became the minister for infrastructure and transport.

    He remained an influential figure as the party entered a tumultuous period after it replaced Mr Rudd with Julia Gillard in 2010.

    Kevin Rudd (L) new Leader Of The ALP stands next to Anthony Albanese, Minister for Infrastructure and Transport as he speaks to the media after winning the leadership ballot at Parliament House on June 26, 2013 in Canberra, Australia.IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Anthony Albanese was instrumental in Kevin Rudd returning as prime minister in 2013

    When Mr Rudd reclaimed the prime ministership in 2013, Mr Albanese’s backing saw him elevated to deputy prime minister. However he only held the position for 10 weeks because Labor lost the election.

    Mr Albanese then put himself forward to be head of the party. Despite being popular among rank-and-file party members, rival Bill Shorten had more support among members of parliament and got the job, becoming Australia’s opposition leader.

    But Mr Albanese’s time finally came in 2019, after Mr Shorten lost two elections and was unseated as the Labor leader.

    Australia’s next PM

    Mr Albanese has been a leading voice of the Labor Party’s left faction, but since becoming leader he has positioned himself more towards the centre.

    In the lead up to the election he was at pains to prove he is “not woke” – an appeal to more conservative voters who abandoned the party at the 2019 poll.

    This has included walking back his support of more aggressive climate action policies while ramping up tougher rhetoric on China and national security.

    Labor party member Anthony Albanese buys a round of beers for supporters in a pub in Sydney.IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, As leader, Mr Albanese has tried to appeal to more voters in the centre

    He has also backed Australia’s controversial policy to turn back any asylum seekers arriving by boat – something he once publicly opposed.

    Mr Albanese has undergone a physical transformation in recent years, losing weight and debuting a new wardrobe, crediting a car crash in 2021 as a wakeup call.

    He stayed true to his Labor roots, however, in promising big spending on the country’s troubled aged care sector, cheaper childcare, and reinvigorating the manufacturing industry.

    Labor has pledged to hold a referendum on enshrining in the constitution an Indigenous Voice to Parliament – an advisory body that would give Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people a role in shaping policies that affect them.

    Mr Albanese opened his victory speech by reiterating this promise.

    Labor leader Anthony Albanese holds dog Toto while campaigning beside son and partner in SydneyIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Labor leader Anthony Albanese will become Australia’s next prime minister, and his beloved dog Toto its next first pooch

    His other key pledge was to leave no Australians behind – referencing his own upbringing.

    “It says a lot about our great country that a son of a single mum who was a disability pensioner, who grew up in public housing… can stand before you tonight as Australia’s Prime Minister.”

    “I want Australia to continue to be a country that no matter where you live, who you worship, who you love or what your last name is, that places no restrictions on your journey in life.

    “I hope that my journey in life inspires Australians to reach for the stars. “

    Source: BBC

  • Kylian Mbappe: Paris St-Germain forward agrees in principle to stay at French champions

    France forward Kylian Mbappe has agreed in principle to stay at Paris St-Germain.

    The 2018 World Cup winner, 23, had been heavily linked with a move to Real Madrid but has committed his future to the French champions.

    Mbappe will sign a lucrative new three-year contract with PSG.

    The deal is still to be signed but PSG are likely to make an announcement around their final game of the season with Metz on Saturday evening.

    According to Spanish football expert Guillem Balague, writing last month, PSG were prepared to offer him a £150m signing-on fee to keep him for another two seasons.

    Mbappe had agreed a financial package with Real months ago for a potential switch to Spain, but has decided not to join Carlo Ancelotti’s side.

    He initially joined PSG on a season-long loan from Monaco in August 2017 and has helped them win four Ligue 1 titles in five seasons.

    The Qatari-owned side were desperate to keep him and were prepared to offer the player a £21m net annual salary.

    Mbappe scored in each leg against Real in the Champions League last 16 this season, but it was not enough to prevent PSG from going out 3-2 on aggregate.

    He is Ligue 1’s leading scorer with 25 goals and provided a further 17 assists in 34 games as PSG won the domestic title with four games to spare.

    PSG boss Mauricio Pochettino said on Friday he had no idea where Mbappe would play his club football next season.

    “I hope Kylian is still here for many years to come but I also can’t lie. I don’t know what is going to happen,” said the former Tottenham boss.

    “There are lots of rumours going around but the player is the one who will have to talk about this.”

    Source: BBC

  • Nigeria’s facial scars: The last generation

    Facial scarification was once popular across Nigeria.

    Deep cuts, usually on both cheeks or the forehead, were carved on children by families and communities, mostly as a mark of identity.

    The marks also held stories of pain, reincarnations and beauty.

    The practice, however, has been fading away since a federal law banned all forms of child mutilation in 2003.

    So the current bearers of facial marks are the last generation – their facial stripes as varied as Nigeria’s many ethnic groups.

    A man with scars on his face

    The 15 slashes on the face of Inaolaji Akeem (above) identify him as someone from the Owu kingdom in Nigeria’s south-western Ogun state.

    Mr Akeem is royal-born, so he has long stripes on his face.

    “It is like a football jersey,” he quips, adding that they made him popular in the local market.

    On a serious note, Mr Akeem says he regards the scars as sacred, and does not believe people should mark their faces just for beautification.

    This need for identification through facial marks was also strong in northern Nigeria, especially among the Gobir people of Sokoto state.

    A man in traditional Hausa cap

    Ibrahim Makkuwana’s ancestors, pastoralists from Gubur in present-day Sokoto, did not have facial marks. But, he said, as they moved around looking for farming land, “they fought many battles and conquered many places”.

    They then decided to make distinctive marks on their cheeks, “akin to the ones their animals had, which would help them in identifying their kinsmen during battles”, Mr Makkuwana says.

    “That was the origin of our marks,” he tells the BBC.

    But there is also a distinction between the Gobirawas.

    Those with six scars on one cheek and seven on the other have both parents from royalty. Those with six marks on both sides have only their mothers from the royal family.

    A man in traditional Hausa cap

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    Then there are the children of butchers, with nine scars on one side and 11 on the other, while those with five and six marks on either side trace their lineage to hunters.

    As for fishermen, they have distinct marks drawn up to their ears.

    Meanwhile, among the Yorubas and Igbos of southern Nigeria, some marks are linked to life and death.

    There was a belief in their communities that some children were destined to die before puberty.

    Known as Abiku and Ogbanje respectively by the two ethnic groups, these children were believed, by the Yoruba, to belong to a coven of demons living in large iroko and baobab trees.

    It was common for women to lose several children at a young age in succession, and it was thought it was the same child, reappearing again and again to torment their mother.

    Such children were then marked to make them unrecognisable to their spirit mates so they would stay alive.

    Many of these infant deaths are now known to be caused by sickle cell anaemia, an inherited disorder common among black people.

    A man with scars on his face
    Yakub Lawal in Ibadan in south-western Oyo state, was marked as an Abiku.
    “This is not my first sojourn to earth, I have been here before,” he says.
    “I died thrice, and on my fourth return I was given these marks to stop me from returning to the spirit world,” he adds.
    Closely related to stories of the Abiku and Ogbanje are those whose marks are in memory of a departed family member or one who has been “reborn”.
    A man with scars on his face

    Olawale Fatunbi’s four horizontal and three vertical marks were inscribed by his grandmother, who said he was a reincarnation of her late husband, who had those facial scars.

    But Mr Fatunbi wishes he didn’t have them.

    “I don’t really like them because I see it as child abuse but it is our culture,” he says.

    A woman with scars on her face

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    With 16 marks on her face, it is hard to miss Khafiat Adeleke. Even harder to miss is the huge signboard at her shop in Ibadan, where she has taken the moniker, Mejo Mejo (Eight Eight) – to represent the scars on her cheeks.

    “People call me Mejo Mejo from here to Lagos.

    “My grandmother gave them to me because I am an only child,” she says.

    A woman with scars on her face

    Some scars are for beauty.

    Foluke Akinyemi was marked as a child, a deep gorge on each cheek supervised by her dad at the hands of a local circumciser, who also did facial scarring.

    “My father made a decision to give me a mark just for the sake of it and because he thought it was beautiful.

    “It makes me stand out and I thank my parents for giving it to me,” she says.

    A woman in blue hijab

    Ms Akinyemi’s story is similar to that of Ramatu Ishyaku from Bauchi, north-east Nigeria, who has tiny whisker-like lacerations on both sides of her mouth.

    “It is for beauty,” she says, adding that she also tattooed her face at about the same time.

    As a girl, the whisker-like markings and tattoos were popular in her village and she and her friends went to the local barber to have them, she adds.

    A woman with scars on her face

    The marks on the face of Taiwo, who only gave her first name, are now fading but the memory of why she was carved still lingers.

    When her twin sister died within weeks of her birth, Taiwo became ill and a traditional healer recommended marking her face to prevent her from joining her twin.

    She became better within days of the scarification, she says, but that has not made her love the marks on her face.

    “It makes you look different from anyone else – I’d rather not have any marks on my face,” she said.

    A man with scars on his face

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    There are also those like Murtala Mohammed in Abuja who don’t know the story behind their marks.

    “Almost everyone in my village in Niger state had one, so I never bothered to ask,” he says.

    A man holding barbing blades

    Facial marks were inscribed by local circumcisers and barbers like Umar Wanzam using sharp blades.

    He describes it as a painful experience done without anaesthetics.

    Most of those like Mr Akeem, who were marked as children, agree it was right to stop facial scarification.

    He did not pass on the tradition to his children even before it was outlawed.

    “I love the marks but they belong to a different time and age,” he says.

     

    Source: BBC